1 research outputs found
Sleep apnoea severity independently predicts glycaemic health in nondiabetic subjects: the ESADA study.
Obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) is associated with increased risk of dysglycaemia
but the intimate link of these conditions with obesity makes discerning an
independent relationship between them challenging. Glycosylated haemoglobin
(HbA1c) levels predict adverse cardiovascular outcomes in nondiabetics but there
is a lack of population-level data exploring the relationship of HbA1c with OSA.
A cross-sectional analysis of 5294 participants in the multinational European
Sleep Apnoea Cohort (European Sleep Apnoea Database) study was performed,
assessing the relationship of OSA severity with HbA1c levels in nondiabetic
subjects, with adjustment for confounding factors. HbA1c levels correlated
significantly with OSA severity in univariate analysis. Following adjustment for
confounding factors, apnoea-hypopnoea index (AHI) (standardised β 0.158;
p<0.001), along with nocturnal hypoxaemia, predicted HbA1c. Adjusted mean HbA1c
levels were lower in the lowest AHI quartile (5.24%, 95% CI 5.21-5.27%) than in
the second (5.37%, 95% CI 5.34-5.40%), third (5.44%, 95% CI 5.41-5.47%) or
highest (5.50%, 95% CI 5.46-5.53%) quartiles. Subjects in the higher quartiles
had significantly greater adjusted odds ratios of HbA1c level ≥6.0% than those in
the first quartile. In stratified analyses, OSA severity predicted glycaemic
health irrespective of sleep study modality, sex, obesity or daytime sleepiness.
OSA severity independently predicts glycaemic health in nondiabetic subjects.
Further studies should assess the impact of OSA treatment on glycaemic health and
elucidate underlying mechanisms
