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Table 5 Relationship between TG/HDL-c ratio and the probability of reverting from prediabetes to normoglycemia in different sensitivity analyses

From: Triglyceride to high-density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio is associated with regression to normoglycemia from prediabetes in adults: a 5-year cohort study in China

Exposure

Model I(HR,95%CI)

Model II(HR,95%CI)

Model III(HR,95%CI)

TG/HDL-c ratio

0.845 (0.816, 0.875) < 0.001

0.869 (0.841, 0.897) < 0.001

0.870 (0.839, 0.902) < 0.001

TG/HDL-c ratio quartiles

 Q1

Ref

Ref

Ref

 Q2

0.916 (0.855, 0.982) 0.014

0.926 (0.865, 0.992) 0.028

0.965 (0.893, 1.043) 0.374

 Q3

0.743 (0.687, 0.803) < 0.001

0.768 (0.712, 0.829) < 0.001

0.797 (0.731, 0.868) < 0.001

 Q4

0.671 (0.618, 0.729) < 0.001

0.704 (0.650, 0.763) < 0.001

0.706 (0.645, 0.772) < 0.001

 P for trend

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

 < 0.001

  1. Model I was a sensitivity analysis performed after excluding participants with BMI ≥ 28 mmol/L (N = 12,705). We adjusted age DBP, sex,, FPG, LDL-c, AST, ALT, drinking status, Scr, smoking status, BUN, SBP, and family history of diabetes
  2. Model II was a sensitivity analysis performed on participants without a family history of diabetes (N = 14,718). We adjusted age, sex, DBP, FPG, LDL-c, AST, ALT, smoking status, Scr, smoking status, BUN, SBP, and drinking status
  3. Model III was a sensitivity analysis performed on participants who had never consumed alcohol (N = 11,410). We adjusted age, sex, DBP, FPG, LDL-c, AST, ALT, smoking status, Scr, smoking status, BUN, SBP, and family history of diabetes
  4. HR Hazard ratios, CI confidence, Ref: reference