Clustering Inflammatory Markers with Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Diabetes Type 2 Can Support Family Physicians’ Clinical Reasoning by Reducing (CROSBI ID 302113)
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Podaci o odgovornosti
Zvonimir Bosnic, Pinar Yildirim, František Babič, Ines Šahinović, Thomas Wittlinger, Ivo Martinović and Ljiljana Trtica Majnaric
engleski
Clustering Inflammatory Markers with Sociodemographic and Clinical Characteristics of Patients with Diabetes Type 2 Can Support Family Physicians’ Clinical Reasoning by Reducing
Diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2) is a complex disease associated with chronic inflammation, end‐ organ damage, and multiple comorbiditinaes. Initiatives are emerging for a more persol‐ized approach in managing DM2 patients. We hypothesized that by clustering inflammatory markers with variables indicating the sociodemographic and clinical contexts of patients with DM2, we could gain insights into the hidden phenotypes and the underlying pathophysiological back‐ grounds thereof. We applied the k‐means algorithm and a total of 30 variables in a group of 174 primary care (PC) patients with DM2 aged 50 years and above and of both genders. We included some emerging markers of inflammation, specifically, neutrophil‐to‐lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and the cytokines IL‐17A and IL‐37. Multiple regression models were used to assess associations of inflammatory markers with other variables. Overall, we observed that the cytokines were more variable than the marker NLR. The set of inflammatory markers was needed to indicate the capacity of patients in the clusters for inflammatory cell recruitment from the circulation to the tissues, and subsequently for the progression of end‐organ damage and vascular complications. The hypothalamus–pituitary–thyroid hormonal axis, in addition to the cytokine IL‐37, may have a suppressive, inflammation‐regulatory role. These results can help PC physicians with their clinical reasoning by reducing the complexity of diabetic patients.
diabetes type 2 ; chronic inflammation ; complex chronic diseases ; primary care patients ; phenotyping ; data mining ; clustering techniques
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Podaci o izdanju
Povezanost rada
Kliničke medicinske znanosti