Urinary markers of nucleic acid oxidation and long-term mortality of newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic patients

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OBJECTIVE: We analyzed data from a cohort of 1,381 newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic patients to test the hypothesis that urinary markers of nucleic acid oxidation are independent predictors of mortality. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We examined the relationship between urinary excretion of markers of DNA oxidation (8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine [8-oxodG]) and RNA oxidation (8-oxo-7,8-dihydroguanosine [8-oxoGuo]) and long-term mortality using Cox proportional hazards regression. RESULTS: After multivariate adjustment, the hazard ratios for all-cause and diabetes-related mortality of patients with 8-oxoGuo levels in the highest quartile compared with those in the lowest quartile were 1.44 (1.12-1.85) and 1.54 (1.13-2.10), respectively. Conversely, no significant associations between 8-oxodG and mortality were found in the adjusted analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Urinary excretion of the RNA oxidation marker 8-oxoGuo measured shortly after diagnosis of type 2 diabetes predicts long-term mortality independently of conventional risk factors. This finding suggests that 8-oxoGuo could serve as a new clinical biomarker in diabetes
Translated title of the contributionUrinary markers of nucleic acid oxidation and long-term mortality of newly diagnosed type 2 diabetic patients
Original languageEnglish
JournalDiabetes Care
Volume34
Issue number12
Pages (from-to)2594-2596
Number of pages3
ISSN0149-5992
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2011

    Research areas

  • Denmark, diabetes, diagnosis, methods, Mortality, PATIENT, Patients, pharmacology, Research, Research Design, Risk, RISK-FACTORS, Risk Factors, semrap-2011-3, Support

ID: 37610639