Liver transplantation (LT) patients are at high risk of developing new-onset diabetes after transplantation (NODAT). Osteocalcin has been proposed as a mediator between bone tissue and glucose metabolism, but its role in the pathogenesis of diabetes is not defined yet. Our objective was to assess the relationship between serum osteocalcin and glucose metabolism parameters in liver transplantation recipients. A total of 187 liver transplantation patients were cross-sectionally studied, 54 of them developed NODAT. None had been diagnosed of diabetes mellitus prior to transplant. In 133 nondiabetic patients, a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was performed to assess blood glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels at baseline and 120 min. Serum total osteocalcin was measured at baseline in all patients.After OGTT, 10.5% of LT patients had NODAT criteria, 51.9% showed impaired glucose tolerance, and 37.6% had normal glucose tolerance. Overall, NODAT prevalence was 36.3%. HOMA-IR was significantly higher in NODAT compared with impaired glucose tolerance and normal glucose tolerance groups (p<0.001). Osteocalcin was inversely correlated to HOMA-IR (r=- 0.16, p=0.05), BMI (r=- 0.27, p=0.000) and waist circumference (r=- 0.21, p=0.005). Patients in the lowest osteocalcin tertile (< 16.5 ng/ml) had significantly higher fasting plasma glucose and HOMA-IR index (p=0.029 and 0.037, respectively) than those in medium or highest tertiles. In multiple linear regression analysis, osteocalcin was negatively associated with fasting plasma glucose (standardized β coefficient-0.16; p=0.041) and 2-h insulin (standardized β coefficient-0.21; p=0.028). Prevalence of NODAT/impaired glucose tolerance is high in liver transplantation patients and is associated with insulin resistance. In these patients total osteocalcin is inversely associated with plasma glucose level and insulin resistance indexes.
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