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E-selectin, but not CRP, partially mediates the association between metabolic indices and insulin resistance in older adults: a mediation analysis Cover

E-selectin, but not CRP, partially mediates the association between metabolic indices and insulin resistance in older adults: a mediation analysis

Open Access
|Feb 2026

Abstract

Background

Evidence on the pathophysiology of insulin resistance (IR), particularly the mediating role of inflammatory markers, remains limited.

Objectives

Prior studies suggest associations of C-reactive protein (CRP) and E-selectin with IR, generally examined independently of other risk factors. This study evaluates their potential mediation roles.

Methods

Using biomarker data from the Midlife in the United States 3 (MIDUS3) 2017–2022 cohort, we conducted cross-sectional bias-corrected bootstrapping mediation analyses to assess whether CRP and E-selectin mediate associations between established risk factors—body mass index (BMI), waist-hip ratio (WHR), total cholesterol/HDL ratio, age, glycated hemoglobin A (HbA1c), smoking status, dietary habits, physical activity, medication use, and sex—and IR measured by log-transformed homeostatic model assessment of IR (HOMA-IR).

Results

The study included 708 participants (57% female; mean age 66.2 ± 9.65 years). CRP did not mediate associations between covariates and HOMA-IR. In contrast, E-selectin showed indirect-only mediation for sex and HOMA-IR (% change in HOMA-IR [%CHIR] in females = 2.4; 95% CI: [0.46, 5.80]). Partial mediation by E-selectin was observed for HbA1c (%CHIR = 9.26; 95% CI: [3.40, 18.66]), BMI (%CHIR = 2.72; 95% CI: [0.97, 5.54]), and total/HDL cholesterol ratio (%CHIR = 1.92; 95% CI: [0.34, 4.49]). Indirect-only mediation was also found for age (%CHIR = −1.11; 95% CI: [−2.58, −0.27]), non-smoking (%CHIR = −1.55; 95% CI: [−4.09, −0.13]), and higher healthy eating index score (%CHIR = −7.87; 95% CI: [−17.48, −2.43]).

Conclusion

E-selectin, but not CRP, mediates relationships between metabolic risk factors and IR, highlighting endothelial dysfunction as a key pathway

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/abm-2026-0007 | Journal eISSN: 1875-855X | Journal ISSN: 1905-7415
Language: English
Page range: 60 - 69
Published on: Feb 27, 2026
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 6 issues per year

© 2026 Laith Ashour, Tariq Albweitel, Juana Abu Rahmeh, Momen Alfawadleh, Afaf El Sharabi, Rahmah Ahmad Shareah, Zaid Alomari, Arar Alhawwari, Mohammad Alkalouti, Noura F. Al-Nawaiseh, Malak S. Ababneh, Abdelrahman Kaoukji, published by Chulalongkorn University
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.