Insulin Resistance and Impaired Insulin Secretion Predict Incident Diabetes: A Statistical Matching Application to the Two Korean Nationwide, Population-Representative Cohorts
	    		
		   		
		   			
		   		
	    	
    	- Author:
	        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Hyemin JO
			        		
			        		
			        		
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			        		Soyeon AHN
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Jung Hun OHN
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Cheol Min SHIN
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Eunjeong JI
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Donggil KIM
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Sung Jae JUNG
			        		
			        		;
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		Joongyub LEE
			        		
			        		
		        		
		        		
		        		
			        		
			        		Author Information
			        		
 - Publication Type:Original Article
 - From:Endocrinology and Metabolism 2024;39(5):711-721
 - CountryRepublic of Korea
 - Language:English
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		        	Abstract:
			       	
			       		
				        
				        	 Background:To evaluate whether insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion are useful predictors of incident diabetes in Koreans using nationwide population-representative data to enhance data privacy. 
				        	
Methods:This study analyzed the data of individuals without diabetes aged >40 years from the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) 2007–2010 and 2015 and the National Health Insurance Service-National Health Screening Cohort (NHIS-HEALS). Owing to privacy concerns, these databases cannot be linked using direct identifiers. Therefore, we generated 10 synthetic datasets, followed by statistical matching with the NHIS-HEALS. Homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) and homeostasis model assessment of β-cell function (HOMA-β) were used as indicators of insulin resistance and insulin secretory function, respectively, and diabetes onset was captured in NHIS-HEALS.
Results:A median of 4,580 (range, 4,463 to 4,761) adults were included in the analyses after statistical matching of 10 synthetic KNHANES and NHIS-HEALS datasets. During a mean follow-up duration of 5.8 years, a median of 4.7% (range, 4.3% to 5.0%) of the participants developed diabetes. Compared to the reference low–HOMA-IR/high–HOMA-β group, the high–HOMA-IR/low– HOMA-β group had the highest risk of diabetes, followed by high–HOMA-IR/high–HOMA-β group and low–HOMA-IR/low– HOMA-β group (median adjusted hazard ratio [ranges]: 3.36 [1.86 to 6.05], 1.81 [1.01 to 3.22], and 1.68 [0.93 to 3.04], respectively).
Conclusion:Insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion are robust predictors of diabetes in the Korean population. A retrospective cohort constructed by combining cross-sectional synthetic and longitudinal claims-based cohort data through statistical matching may be a reliable resource for studying the natural history of diabetes. 
            