- High ZJU score? Higher diabetes risk, lower chance of recovery
- Helps adults with prediabetes, especially in early stages
- Not a treatment — but a powerful warning sign already in use
This simple number could help stop diabetes before it starts.
You’re 45, feel fine, and your last checkup showed slightly high blood sugar. You’re told to “watch it.” But no one knows if you’ll bounce back — or slide into diabetes.
Now, a new study of over 11,000 people in China may have found a better way to predict what happens next.
Prediabetes means your blood sugar is higher than normal — but not yet diabetic. It’s a quiet warning. And for millions, it’s the last chance to turn things around.
In the U.S., about 1 in 3 adults has prediabetes. Most don’t know it. And globally, numbers keep rising — especially in Asian populations.
Many with prediabetes have impaired fasting glucose (IFG). That means their blood sugar is too high after not eating — usually first thing in the morning. Right now, doctors guess who might get worse. But guesses aren’t enough.
Current tools don’t always catch who’s truly at risk. Some people improve on their own. Others get diabetes within a few years.
We need better ways to tell the difference — fast.
The Surprising Shift
For years, doctors focused on single numbers: weight, blood sugar, cholesterol. They looked at each piece apart.
But the body doesn’t work that way. Metabolism is a system — like a network of roads. One traffic jam can slow everything down.
Scientists now think we need combined scores — tools that look at the whole picture. One of those is the ZJU index.
What’s Different This Time
The ZJU index isn’t new — but how it’s being used is.
It combines routine blood tests: blood sugar, triglycerides, HDL (“good”) cholesterol, and insulin levels. Doctors plug them into a formula. Out comes one number — the ZJU score.
Think of it like a “metabolic report card.” A higher score means more strain on your body’s ability to manage sugar.
But here’s the twist: No one knew how well this score could predict the future for people with IFG — until now.
Your body runs on glucose — sugar from food. But sugar can’t get into cells without insulin, a hormone that acts like a key.
In prediabetes, the “lock” starts to rust. Cells don’t respond well to insulin — this is called insulin resistance.
The pancreas tries to keep up by making more insulin. But over time, it can’t keep pace. Blood sugar rises. Diabetes follows.
The ZJU index measures how hard your body is working — and how close you might be to breaking point.
One Number, Two Futures
The study followed 11,243 Chinese adults with IFG for several years. All had their ZJU index calculated at the start.
Researchers then tracked two things: Did people return to normal blood sugar? Or did they progress to type 2 diabetes?
The results were clear.
People with higher ZJU scores were much less likely to get better on their own. Each one-point rise in the score meant a 3% lower chance of returning to normal.
At the same time, their risk of diabetes went up — by 12% per point.
That’s not just a small bump. It means this one number could help spot who needs help now.
The Threshold That Matters
The study found a turning point — a ZJU score of about 38.5. Below it, people had a real shot at reversing prediabetes.
Above it, the odds shifted sharply. The higher the score, the steeper the climb back.
This wasn’t a straight line. After 38.5, the risk of diabetes rose faster — like a car accelerating downhill.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
This isn’t a drug. It’s not a cure. But it could change how doctors manage prediabetes.
Right now, many people get general advice: lose weight, eat better, move more. But not everyone needs the same push.
The ZJU index could help personalize care. High score? You may need early, strong action — like medication or a structured program.
Low score? You might reverse it with lifestyle changes alone.
This study adds to growing proof that combined scores beat single numbers. It fits with other research using tools like the TyG index or metabolic syndrome scores.
Experts say we’re moving toward precision prevention — not guessing, but knowing. And doing it with tests already done in routine checkups.
No extra blood draws. No new machines. Just smarter use of data we already collect.
If you have prediabetes, this score isn’t yet standard in the U.S. or Europe. But it might be soon.
Ask your doctor if your clinic uses metabolic scores like ZJU, TyG, or others. Even better: ask what your risk really is — and how they’re deciding.
Lifestyle changes still work. But knowing your risk level could help you take the right steps — at the right time.
The Catch
This study only included Chinese adults. We don’t yet know if the same threshold (38.5) works for other groups.
Also, it was a retrospective study — meaning it looked back at old data. The next step is testing this in real time — to see if acting on the score actually improves outcomes.
And while the ZJU index uses common tests, not all clinics calculate it automatically. It’s not yet part of most electronic health records.
Researchers need to test this in diverse populations — including Black, Hispanic, and European groups. Future studies will likely track whether using the ZJU index helps people avoid diabetes in real-world care.