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Continuous Metabolic Syndrome Scores for Children Using Salivary Biomarkers
Authors:Ping Shi  J. Max Goodson  Mor-Li Hartman  Hatice Hasturk  Tina Yaskell  Jorel Vargas  Maryann Cugini  Roula Barake  Osama Alsmadi  Sabiha Al-Mutawa  Jitendra Ariga  Pramod Soparkar  Jawad Behbehani  Kazem Behbehani  Francine Welty
Affiliation:1. Department of Applied Oral Sciences, the Forsyth Research Institute, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America.; 2. The Dasman Diabetes Institute, Kuwait City, Kuwait.; 3. Ministry of Health, Kuwait City, Kuwait.; 4. Faculty of Dentistry, Kuwait University, Kuwait City, Kuwait.; 5. Division of Cardiology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.; University, ITALY,
Abstract:

Background

Binary definitions of the metabolic syndrome based on the presence of a particular number of individual risk factors are limited, particularly in the pediatric population. To address this limitation, we aimed at constructing composite and continuous metabolic syndrome scores (cmetS) to represent an overall measure of metabolic syndrome (MetS) in a large cohort of metabolically at-risk children, focusing on the use of the usual clinical parameters (waist circumference (WC) and systolic blood pressure (SBP), supplemented with two salivary surrogate variables (glucose and high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC). Two different approaches used to create the scores were evaluated in comparison.

Methods

Data from 8,112 Kuwaiti children (10.00 ± 0.67 years) were used to construct two cmetS for each subject. The first cmetS (cmetS-Z) was created by summing standardized residuals of each variable regressed on age and gender; and the second cmetS (cmetS-PCA) was defined as the first principal component from gender-specific principal component analysis based on the four variables.

Results

There was a graded relationship between both scores and the number of adverse risk factors. The areas under the curve using cmetS-Z and cmetS-PCA as predictors for severe metabolic syndrome (defined as the presence of ≥3 metabolic risk factors) were 0.935 and 0.912, respectively. cmetS-Z was positively associated with WC, SBP, and glucose, but inversely associated with HDLC. Except for the lack of association with glucose, cmetS-PCA was similar to cmetS-Z in boys, but had minimum loading on HDLC in girls. Analysis using quantile regression showed an inverse association of fitness level with cmetS-PCA (p = 0.001 for boys; p = 0.002 for girls), and comparison of cmetS-Z and cmetS-PCA suggested that WC and SBP were main contributory components. Significant alterations in the relationship between cmetS and salivary adipocytokines were demonstrated in overweight and obese children as compared to underweight and normal-weight children.

Conclusion

We have derived continuous summary scores for MetS from a large-scale pediatric study using two different approaches, incorporating salivary measures as surrogate for plasma measures. The derived scores were viable expressions of metabolic risk, and can be utilized to study the relationships of MetS with various aspects of the metabolic disease process.
Keywords:
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