Diabetes mellitus is a highly prevalent metabolic disorder associated with chronic, low-grade inflammation. Of recent interest is the association between diabetes and circadian rhythm disruption. The aim of this review is to evaluate and synthesise clinical evidence for whether diabetes affects homeostatic diurnal patterns to proinflammatory markers in the human body. This could inform the optimal timing of immune-targeted therapies over the course of the day.
This systematic review will include primary clinical research studies reporting on diurnal variations, defined as an afternoon/evening (PM) minus a morning (AM) value, within a timeframe of 12±4 hours, for predefined proinflammatory markers, in individuals with diabetes (type 1 or type 2) compared with healthy controls. A search of online databases (Cochrane CENTRAL, Ovid MEDLINE and Ovid Embase) will be performed. Grey literature searches will be performed in clinical trial registries. Two review authors will independently screen retrieved citation records at the title/abstract and full-text levels. Study quality will be assessed using an appropriate National Institute of Health quality assessment tool. A meta-analysis will be performed if more than one study reports equivalent data for any outcome. Statistical heterogeneity will be assessed using the 2 test. Where a meta-analysis is not possible or unlikely to be meaningful, a narrative synthesis of the findings will be provided.
Ethics approval is not required for this systematic review as no original data will be collected. The results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publication and conference presentations.
CRD420251115780.