Moderation of the effect of glycemia on the risk of cardiovascular disease in type 1 diabetes: The DCCT/EDIC study

Publication Description
We assessed whether and to what extent established cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors moderate (enhance/reduce) the effect of hyperglycemia on CVD outcomes in the long-term follow-up of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial type 1 diabetes (T1D) cohort (N = 1441). Moderation of the effect of glycemia on subsequent risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE: fatal or non-fatal myocardial infarction or stroke) and any-CVD (MACE plus confirmed angina, silent MI, revascularization, or congestive heart failure) was assessed separately using interaction terms between HbA1c and other risk factors in Cox proportional hazards models. Over a median follow-up of 29 years, there were 120 MACE cases and 239 any-CVD cases. Higher pulse, higher triglycerides, use of calcium channel blockers, and presence of neuropathy individually enhanced (p < 0.01) the effect of glycemia on any-CVD. Higher pulse and triglyceride levels, albumin excretion rate, hypertension, and no family history of type 2 diabetes enhanced (p < 0.01) the effect of glycemia on MACE. Such moderation analyses identify subgroups with increased CVD risk who might especially benefit from earlier and/or more intensive glycemic control. Interventions treating modifiable moderating factors may independently reduce the risk of CVD and also reduce the risk associated with a higher HbA1c.

Primary Author
Bebu,Ionut
Braffett,Barbara H.
Orchard,Trevor J.
Lorenzi,Gayle M.
Nathan,David M.
Herman,William H.
Lachin,John M.

Volume
171

Start Page
108591

Publisher
Elsevier B.V

URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diabres.2020.108591 https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.diabres.2020.108591



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetes research and clinical practice

Publication Year
2021

Publication Date
Jan

Place of Publication
Ireland

ISSN/ISBN
0168-8227

Document Object Index
10.1016/j.diabres.2020.108591