Single-Point Insulin Sensitivity Estimator (SPISE) as a Feasible Marker of Insulin Resistance in Adult Metabolic Syndrome: Evaluated in a Hospital Based Cross-Sectional Pilot Study at Tertiary Care Centre of Uttarakhand

This study was planned to evaluate whether SPISE could be a useful potential low-cost indicator for predicting MetS with IR patients in Indian population. Eighty-three participants from outpatient care  of AIIMS Rishikesh were evaluated after informed consent. They were divided into Metabolic syndrome (n = 56) and Non Metabolic Syndrome(n = 27), using South Asian Modified National Cholesterol Education Program- ATP-III criteria for metabolic syndrome. SPISE index, HOMA-IR, Insulin Resista nce Index, Triglycerides to high-density lipoproteins cholesterol ratio (TG/HDL-C) were calculated for all the subjects. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was plotted to assess discriminatory ability of SPISE, HOMA-IR, TG/HDL-C ratio, IRI and hs-CRP to differentiate between IR(Metabolic syndrome) and non-IR (Non-Metabolic syndrome) subjects. SPISE has greater area under curve with better sensitivity and specificity compared to HOMA-IR, IRI, TG/HDL-C ratio and hs CRP. So, SPISE has better predictive ability than HOMA-IR, IRI, TG/HDL-C ratio and hs CRP to discriminate IR from non-IR cases. SPISE could be a useful potential low-cost indicator with high sensitivity and specificity for predicting IR in MetS patients.
Source: Indian Journal of Clinical Biochemistry - Category: Biochemistry Source Type: research