OBJECTIVE -To investigate associations between adult markers of childhood growth and the prevalence of diabetes and coronary heart disease (CHD) in Filipino-American women and to determine the role of social and educational differences, including the influence of social mobility between childhood and adulthood.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS -Socioeconomic disadvantage and poor infant growth, resulting in short leg length, may contribute to the dramatically increased risk of diabetes and CHD in Filipino-American women, but this has not been investigated. This study is a cross-sectional study of 389 Filipino-American women (age 58.7 Ϯ 9.4 years [mean Ϯ SD]). Diabetes was defined by 1999 World Health Organization criteria and CHD by ischemic electrocardiogram changes, Rose angina, a history of myocardial infarction, or revascularization surgery. A score of social mobility (0 -4) was calculated by summarizing childhood and adult financial circumstances.RESULTS -Diabetes prevalence (31.4%) was not associated with measures of growth but was significantly lower in women with greater education, childhood and adult income, or social mobility score. Compared with Filipinas who were poorest in childhood and adulthood, respective odds ratios (95% CI) for diabetes were 0.55 (0.18 -1.68), 0.19 (0.06 -0.62), and 0.11 (0.03-0.42), down to 0.07 (0.01-0.51) in the most advantaged women (P Ͻ 0.0001). Family history of diabetes [5.14 (2.72-9.70)] and larger waist [1.07 per cm (1.03-1.10)] were also significant predictors in multiple adjusted models. In contrast, CHD prevalence (22.4%) was most strongly associated with leg length, but not trunk length; compared with individuals with the shortest legs, respective odds ratios (95% CI) for CHD were 0.60 (0.31-1.19), 0.53 (0.26 -1.05), and 0.44 (0.22-0.91) in the tallest group, in age-(P trend ϭ 0.02) and multiple-adjusted models (P trend ϭ 0.01).CONCLUSIONS -Socioeconomic disadvantage contributes to the high prevalence of diabetes in Filipinas. Factors limiting early growth of the legs may increase the risk of CHD in this comparatively short population.
Diabetes Care 30:535-541, 2007I mmigrant populations and nonCaucasians, such as African Americans, Latinos, American Indians, and Native Hawaiians in the U.S., have an increased risk for obesity, type 2 diabetes, and coronary heart disease (CHD) compared with Caucasians (1). Less is known about those risks in Filipinos (2,3), the third largest immigrant population in the U.S. (4). Results from this study have recently demonstrated that FilipinoAmerican women had sixfold greater odds of having diabetes and threefold greater odds of having the metabolic syndrome than Caucasian women, despite similar body size (5).Early chronic or intermittent malnutrition, leading to impaired development of the endocrine system and followed by exposure to a Western diet with an abundance of food, has been suggested to be responsible for the greater levels of metabolic disorders in immigrant populations (6). In addition to genetic influences on height, early ...