Type 2 diabetes mellitus is among the fastest growing diseases in the world due to a combination of unfavourable changes in modifiable risk factors and a high genetic susceptibility in many populations [1]. The rapid increase of diabetes worldwide is primarily a consequence of aging in most populations and the increase of obesity and physical inactivity [2].

Cross-sectional [3, 4, 5] and prospective [6, 7, 8] studies have shown an association between age and body mass index and the prevalence and incidence of Type 2 diabetes. These associations have been consistently reported from different ethnic groups.

The prevalence of Type 2 diabetes varies considerably between countries, regions and ethnic groups [2]. Although the variation in prevalence has been associated with regional variations in the distribution of established behavioral and environmental risk factors [3, 4, 5], it has not been fully explained by these factors.

The aim of this study was to assess the effect of ethnicity on the association between age, BMI, and the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes based on the analysis of data from two collaborative studies, "Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative analysis of Diagnostic Criteria in Europe (DECODE)" and "Diabetes Epidemiology: Collaborative Analysis of Diagnostic Criteria in Asia (DECODA)" [9, 10].

Subjects and methods

Participants and study design

We invited centres in Europe and Asia, who had done surveys on the prevalence of Type 2 diabetes, using a standard 75-g OGTT with fasting and 2-h glucose measurements, to participate in the DECODE and DECODA studies. The study design and data collection have been described in detail in previous publications [9, 10]. Each centre provided original data including age, sex, date of examination, height, weight, status of known diabetes, glucose concentrations (fasting and 2-h), blood specimen used (venous whole blood, venous plasma, serum or capillary whole blood) and the method of the glucose assay used. BMI was calculated as weight (kg)/height2 (m). Data were sent to the Diabetes and Genetic Epidemiology Unit at the National Public Health Institute in Helsinki, Finland.

The inclusion criteria for this paper were: population-based studies carried out after 1980 using a standard 2-h 75-g OGTT in the morning after an overnight fast of at least 10 h according to the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendations [11]. Twelve surveys from Europe [12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18] including a survey from Malta, three surveys from India [19, 20, 21], two surveys from China and three surveys from Japan[22, 23, 24] fulfilled these criteria and were included in the study. A total of 29,369 subjects (14,240 men and 15,129 women) who were 30 to 89 years of age were included in the analysis (Table 1). Data for Malta were analysed separately from the other European countries for two reasons: firstly, there was a 10-year difference in the survey period between Malta and the other European surveys and secondly, the age-adjusted prevalence of the Maltese population was very high compared to the other European populations [25].

Table 1. Characteristics of survey analysed for this study

Subjects who had previously been diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes or those who were newly-diagnosed with a fasting plasma glucose over 7.0 mmol/l and/or a 2-h plasma glucose over 11.1 mmol/l after a 75-g OGTT according to the WHO criteria [26], were considered as having diabetes. For surveys using serum, venous whole blood or capillary whole blood, the corresponding diagnostic cut-points were: 7.0, 6.1 and 6.1 mmol/l (fasting) and 11.1, 10.0 and 11.1 mmol/l (2-h post load).

Statistical analysis

All analyses were carried out and are reported by sex. The sex-specific mean levels of BMI stratified by age were compared between ethnic groups by ANOVA in 10-year age group strata. The logistic regression model was adopted to estimate the prevalence of diabetes (log odds (diabetes) = intercept + α age + γ ethnicity) with age as a continuous variable and ethnicity classified as European, Maltese, Indian, Chinese and Japanese. The prevalence of diabetes adjusted for age and BMI was estimated using a spline model with age, BMI and ethnicity included as explanatory variables and where age of 45, 55, 60 and 70 years and BMI of 22, 24, 26 and 28 kg/m2 were adopted as knots (for details see equation in Appendix 1). The interaction effect of ethnicity and age/BMI was done by using the chi-squared log likelihood ratio test with nested models. Similar statistical analyses were done to test the interaction effect of sex on the association between age, BMI and prevalence of diabetes within the same ethnic group. All statistical analysis was done by using SPSS for Windows version 11.0. A p value of less than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant. All participants gave their informed consent to participate in the study according to the declaration of Helsinki and other ethical standards relevant to the time when the data was collected.

Results

Table 1 shows the basic characteristics for each survey. The age ranged from 30 to 89 years, but with pronounced difference between the surveys. The lowest BMI was found in Chennai (Madras), India (median 22.0 kg/m2 in men and 23.0 kg/m2 in women) and the highest BMI in Finrisk 92, Finland (27.3 kg/m2 in men and women) and Malta (27.1 kg/m2 in men and 28.7 kg/m2 in women). In both sexes age-specific BMI was highest in Malta and Europe with the lowest levels found in Japan and India (Fig. 1). Except for China, BMI increased by age until age 50 to 59 years in men and 60 to 69 years in women; thereafter it stabilised or decreased.

Fig. 1A, B.
figure 1

Mean body mass index (BMI) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) by age and ethnic group, (A) for men and (B) for women. European (closed triangles), Maltese (open triangles), Indian (closed squares), Chinese (closed circles) and Japanese (open circles)

Prevalence of diabetes by age

In all ethnic groups the prevalence of diabetes increased with age, but the association between age and prevalence of diabetes was higher in the Indian and Maltese populations compared to all other ethnic groups in both men and women (Fig. 2). The association between age and prevalence of diabetes differed significantly between the ethnic groups, with the increase by age being higher in the Maltese (p<0.05) and lower for the Chinese (p<0.05) and Japanese (p<0.005) cohorts compared to the European cohorts. By the age of 60 years the estimated prevalence of diabetes in men and women were 27.9/28.6% in Indian, 25.9/29.2% in Maltese, 11.9/10.1% in European, 11.2/7.6% in Japanese, and 10.9/15.0% in Chinese subjects.

Fig. 2A, B.
figure 2

Age-specific prevalence of diabetes by age and ethnic group, (A) for men and (B) for women. European (closed triangles), Maltese (open triangles), Indian (closed squares), Chinese (closed circles) and Japanese (open circles)

Interaction between ethnicity, age, BMI and prevalence of Type 2 diabetes

Adjusted for age, the association between BMI and prevalence of diabetes differed significantly between the ethnic groups with the highest prevalence in Indian subjects followed by Maltese, Japanese, European and Chinese men while in women it was highest in Indian, followed by Maltese, Chinese, Japanese and European women (Fig. 3): In men using Europe as the reference age adjusted effect of BMI on the prevalence of diabetes differed significantly in Malta (p<0.01) and India (p<0.05), while in women it differed in Malta (p<0.001), India (p<0.001) and China (p<0.005). In the Indian cohort the age-adjusted prevalence of diabetes started to increase in the BMI range of 15 to 20 kg/m2 for both men and women. In the Maltese cohort the prevalence increased with BMI in men but not in women, whereas in all the three other groups the prevalence increased by BMI in both sexes. The sex difference in the effect of BMI on the age-adjusted prevalence of diabetes was significant only in the Indian cohort (p<0.01).

Fig. 3A, B.
figure 3

BMI and prevalence of DM, (A) for 60-year-old men and (B) for 60-year-old women. European (closed triangles), Maltese (open triangles), Indian (closed squares), Chinese (closed circles) and Japanese (open circles)

Figure 4 shows the effect of age on the prevalence of diabetes in men and women adjusted for BMI (BMI set at 25 kg/m2). In men the European and Chinese prevalence curves started to increase by the age of 45 while for all the other three groups the prevalence started to increase by the age of 30 years. In European women the prevalence of diabetes started to increase by age 45 years, while in all other ethnic groups the increase started between 30 and 40 years of age. The peak prevalence was found by the age of 55 to 60 years in Japanese, 60 years in Indian and 70 years in Maltese groups independent of sex, while the prevalence continued to increase throughout all ages in the Chinese and European groups. The BMI-standardized age effect differed between the ethnic groups. In men, using European as the reference the BMI adjusted effect of age on the prevalence of diabetes was significantly different in the Indian, Chinese and Japanese men (p<0.001, p<0.05, p<0.001 respectively), and in women the Maltese, Indian, Chinese and Japanese women all differed significantly from the European women (p<0.001 for all comparison). The BMI-adjusted effect of age on the prevalence of diabetes differed between men and women in the European (p<0.001), Chinese (p<0.05) and Japanese (p<0.05) cohorts.

Fig. 4A, B.
figure 4

Age and prevalence of DM, (A) for men with BMI 25 kg/m2 and (B) for women with BMI 25 kg/m2. European (closed triangles), Maltese (open triangles), Indian (closed squares), Chinese (closed circles) and Japanese (open circles)

Discussion

This study confirms the large ethnic, regional and sex-dependent variation in the age-adjusted prevalence of Type 2 diabetes as reviewed by the WHO [2]. This study also shows that this variation cannot be explained by differences in BMI between the populations. We found that ethnicity modified the effect of BMI on the age-adjusted prevalence of Type 2 diabetes. The association between age and the prevalence of diabetes was also modified by ethnicity. Together these observations indicate that ethnicity not only affects the over all susceptibility to diabetes, but also modifies the effect of established risk factors for Type 2 diabetes. Ethnicity is associated with a long list of factors including genetic constitution, living conditions, life style factors and anthropometry. Thus it is not simply the difference in BMI distributions that explain the worldwide variation in the age-standardized prevalence of Type 2 diabetes.

The relative contribution of reduced insulin secretion and reduced insulin sensitivity as contributors to the development of diabetes differs between various ethnic groups. Asian Indians have been shown to be more insulin-resistant than most other ethnic groups [27]. Preferential deposition and distribution of fat in the abdominal region is associated with reduced insulin-mediated glucose disposal, independent of an overall degree of obesity [28, 29, 30]. Anthropometric studies have shown that the distribution of fat differs between ethnic groups, and thus identical distributions of BMI in two populations could still reflect large differences with respect to the accumulation of intra-abdominal fat, and Asian populations have been shown to be more prone to abdominal obesity and low muscle mass [27, 31, 32, 33]. Thus excessive insulin resistance related to intra-abdominal fat deposition and low muscle mass could explain the very high prevalence of diabetes in the Indian populations despite the absence of significant obesity as expressed by BMI.

Indians had a very high prevalence of diabetes adjusted for age, and the risk started to increase at very low levels of BMI. The explanation should probably partly be found through the same explanations as those given for Chinese and Japanese subjects, but in addition to this there could also be an association with the very low birth weight often seen in Indian subjects [34]. It has been suggested that low birth weight as an indicator of intrauterine malnutrition could be an important contributor to the otherwise peculiar prevalence pattern found in Indian subjects [35]. A recent study carried out in India has confirmed the importance of intrauterine and early childhood development for the risk of Type 2 diabetes [34].

In contrast, insulin deficiency rather than insulin resistance has been reported to play a prominent role in the progression of diabetes in Japanese subjects [36]. Thus the insulin secretory inferiority could partly explain the higher prevalence of diabetes in non-obese Japanese and Chinese populations compared to European populations.

Our finding that the association between BMI and diabetes is modified by ethnicity supports the need for a redefinition of obesity based on geographical region and ethnicity as suggested by the joint enterprise of the Regional Office for the Western Pacific of the WHO, the International Association for the Study of Obesity and the International Obesity Task Force in 2000 [37]. Although BMI is a simple and non-invasive method for assessing obesity and excessive fat stores within a single population, it is less reliable when it comes to comparing body composition between populations [38, 39]. Our findings indicate that BMI is an unreliable measure for studying the association between obesity and insulin resistance or Type 2 diabetes across ethnic groups. Further studies should focus on the potential ethnic differences in the regional fat distribution, and simple and reliable instruments are needed to evaluate the metabolic consequences of visceral fat obesity between geographical regions and ethnic groups. The simple measurement of waist circumference could be a suitable measure.

We found that the overall effect of age on the prevalence of diabetes differed considerably between the ethnic groups even in subjects with the same BMI. Moreover we found that the prevalence started to increase at a higher age in the European cohort than in any other group studied. These observations must, however, be interpreted with some caution as differences in mortality between ethnic groups will contribute to differences in the prevalence of diabetes. The delayed clinical diagnosis in the Chinese and Japanese populations combined with the excess mortality associated with Type 2 diabetes [40] could explain the lower prevalence of diabetes in the old age groups in some Asian populations.

The increasing prevalence of diabetes worldwide has been labelled an "epidemic of diabetes" and at present the focus is on how this "epidemic" can be prevented. Three different studies have shown that dietary modification and increased physical activity can reduce the 6-year risk of developing diabetes by 40 to 60% in high-risk subjects with IGT [41, 42, 43]. These recent trials have provided guidelines as to who should be targeted in the preventive process. Our data showing that ethnicity has a major effect on the deleterious consequences of obesity with aging suggests that target groups for intervention strategies (based on age and BMI) may have to be defined for each ethnic group separately, and future studies should aim at defining these high risk groups.