6533b7d7fe1ef96bd12684d1

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Mortality and cardiovascular disease burden of uncontrolled diabetes in a registry-based cohort: the ESCARVAL-risk study

Maria Tellez-plazaMaria Tellez-plazaDomingo Orozco-beltránVicente Francisco Gil-guillénAlejandro Dominguez-lucasAna María Perez-navarroFrancisco VallsAntonio FernandezRedon JosepJosep RedonJose M. Martin-morenoJorge Navarro-pérezJorge Navarro-pérezC. SanchisVicente Pallarés

subject

Malelcsh:Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) systemTime Factors030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyPatient Admission0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsCause of DeathEpidemiologyattributable riskElectronic Health RecordsProspective StudiesRegistries030212 general & internal medicineProspective cohort studyStrokediabetesDiabetesMiddle AgedPrognosisAll-cause mortalitystrokeCor MalaltiesHospitalizationCoronary heart diseaseStrokeCardiovascular DiseasesCohortall-cause mortalityFemaleAttributable riskCardiology and Cardiovascular MedicinehospitalizationResearch ArticleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyHbA1cRisk Assessment03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusDiabetes MellitusmedicineHumansHypoglycemic Agentscoronary heart diseaseDisease burdenAgedGlycated HemoglobinPrimary Health Carebusiness.industrymedicine.diseaselcsh:RC666-701SpainRelative riskAttributable riskbusinessBiomarkers

description

Background: Despite the epidemiological evidence about the relationship between diabetes, mortality and cardiovascular disease, information about the population impact of uncontrolled diabetes is scarce. We aimed to estimate the attributable risk associated with HbA1c levels for all-cause mortality and cardiovascular hospitalization.Methods: Prospective study of subjects with diabetes mellitus using electronic health records from the universal public health system in the Valencian Community, Spain 2008–2012. We included 19,140 men and women aged 30 years or older with diabetes who underwent routine health examinations in primary care.Results: A total of 11,003 (57%) patients had uncontrolled diabetes defined as HbA1c ≥6.5%, and, among those, 5325 participants had HbA1c ≥7.5%. During an average follow-up time of 3.3 years, 499 deaths, 912 hospitalizations for coronary heart disease (CHD) and 786 hospitalizations for stroke were recorded. We observed a linear and increasingly positive dose-response of HbA1c levels and CHD hospitalization. The relative risk for all-cause mortality and CHD and stroke hospitalization comparing patients with and without uncontrolled diabetes was 1.29 (95 CI 1.08,1.55), 1.38 (95 CI 1.20,1.59) and 1.05 (95 CI 0.91, 1.21), respectively. The population attributable risk (PAR) associated with uncontrolled diabetes was 13.6% (95% CI; 4.0–23.9) for all-cause mortality, 17.9% (95% CI; 10.5–25.2) for CHD and 2.7% (95% CI; − 5.5-10.8) for stroke hospitalization.Conclusions: In a large general-practice cohort of patients with diabetes, uncontrolled glucose levels were associated with a substantial mortality and cardiovascular disease burden.

https://doi.org/10.1186/s12872-018-0914-1