The association between indoor biofuel use for cooking and glucose metabolism in adults: A cross-sectional study in Tanzania

坦桑尼亚一项横断面研究探讨了室内生物燃料烹饪与成人葡萄糖代谢之间的关联

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Abstract

The burden of type 2 diabetes is rapidly increasing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), but determinants are not well-characterized. Household air pollution (HAP) from indoor biofuel use for cooking has been associated with non-communicable diseases and could be contributing to the increasing burden of diabetes in LMICs, though data are limited. We assessed the association between indoor biofuel use for cooking and glucose metabolism in HIV-infected and HIV-uninfected Tanzanian adults. This cross-sectional analysis included Tanzanian adults with and without HIV, from whom we collected sociodemographic and non-communicable disease risk factor data. The main predictor variable was indoor biofuel use for cooking, established using self-reported cooking location (indoor or outdoor) and fuel type (electricity/gas or biomass fuel), and categorized as minimal or no exposure, moderate exposure, and high exposure. Blood glucose and insulin were measured during oral glucose tolerance tests, allowing computation of outcome variables including markers of β-cell dysfunction (homeostatic model assessment-β, insulinogenic index, oral disposition index), insulin resistance (HOMA-IR and Matsuda index), and pre-diabetes and diabetes status. Logistic regression was used to assess associations, adjusting for age, sex, physical activity, smoking, socioeconomic status, HIV status, and body mass index. Among 1,871 participants (mean age 40.6 ± 11.9 years; 59.8% female), those with moderate and high exposure to HAP had approximately two-fold higher odds of a lower insulinogenic index (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.13, 95% CI: 1.27-3.57 and aOR = 2.31, 95% CI: 1.39-3.83, respectively) compared to those with minimal or no exposure. HAP was not associated with other markers of β-cell function, insulin resistance, pre-diabetes, or diabetes. In conclusion, HAP is associated with increased risk of β-cell dysfunction among individuals using biofuel for indoor cooking. Longitudinal studies using objective HAP measurements are needed to confirm these findings.

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