Research Article: Estimated small dense low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and hyperuricemia in diabetic patients
Abstract:
Small dense low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (sdLDL-C) is a key driver of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk. This study aims to investigate the relationship between estimated sdLDL-C (E-sdLDL-C) and hyperuricemia in diabetic populations.
This study analyzed 3572 diabetic participants from the NHANES dataset and an independent validation cohort of 248 Chinese subjects from the Affiliated Wujin Hospital of Jiangsu University. E-sdLDL-C was derived from basic lipid profile parameters. Hyperuricemia was determined by serum uric acid ?420 ?mol/L for men and ?360 ?mol/L for women. The relationship between E-sdLDL-C and hyperuricemia was examined using logistic regression, with restricted cubic splines applied to explore non-linear associations.
Diabetic patients with hyperuricemia had significantly higher E-sdLDL-C levels (P<0.001). Each standard deviation increase in E-sdLDL-C was associated with 39% higher odds of hyperuricemia (OR = 1.39, 95% CI: 1.28-1.51, P<0.001). Quartile analysis showed a dose-response relationship, with progressively higher odds ratios across increasing quartiles of E-sdLDL-C. Restricted cubic spline modeling identified a non-linear relationship, with an inflection point at 25.83 ?mol/L. The robustness of these associations was confirmed through external validation in an independent Chinese diabetic cohort.
E-sdLDL-C might serve as a practical biomarker for identifying diabetic patients at increased hyperuricemia risk.
Introduction:
Small dense low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (sdLDL-C) is a key driver of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk. This study aims to investigate the relationship between estimated sdLDL-C (E-sdLDL-C) and hyperuricemia in diabetic populations.
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