Murcia Alvaro M, Hennekens Charles H, Lamas Gervasio A, Jiménez-Navarro Manuel, Rouleau Jean L, Flaker Greg C, Goldman Steven, Skali Hicham, Braunwald Eugene, Pfeffer Marc A
Mount Sinai Medical Center & Miami Heart Institute, Miami Beach, Fla., USA.
Arch Intern Med. 2004 Nov 8;164(20):2273-9. doi: 10.1001/archinte.164.20.2273.
Diabetes is a major risk factor for developing coronary heart disease. In patients with diabetes who survived myocardial infarction (MI), less is known about subsequent morbidity and mortality. We evaluated the effects of diabetes in post-MI patients with left ventricular dysfunction on cardiovascular events and death.
The Survival and Ventricular Enlargement, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled multicenter trial, evaluated the efficacy of captopril vs placebo in 2231 patients following acute MI with left ventricular dysfunction defined as an ejection fraction less than or equal to 40%. Patients were randomly assigned to captopril or placebo 3 to 16 days following MI and were followed up for 2 to 5 years (mean, 3.5 years).
Among the 2231, 496 (22.2%) were patients with a history of diabetes, of which 168 (33.9%) were treated with insulin. Patients with diabetes were significantly older; more likely to be women; have a history of prior MI or hypertension; be obese or manifest Killip class II or greater; and have higher systolic blood pressure, pulse pressure, and heart rate, as well as lower ejection fraction. During follow-up, 31.3% of patients with diabetes and 20.1% of nondiabetic patients died (P<.001). Furthermore, 50% of the patients with diabetes had at least 1 major cardiovascular event compared with 32.3% among the nondiabetic patients (P<.001). In multivariate analysis that adjusted for all significant differences in baseline characteristics, patients with diabetes had a 39% higher total mortality (P = .001) and 49% more cardiovascular events (P = .001). Among the patients with diabetes, baseline insulin treatment was associated with a greater risk of death (41.1% vs 26.2%; P = .001) and cardiovascular events (58.3% vs 45.7%; P = .008).
In patients who survived MI with left ventricular dysfunction, diabetes increased risk of death from all causes even after controlling for differences in other risk factors. Patients with diabetes treated with insulin have a particularly higher mortality risk. Patients with diabetes who survived MI with left ventricular dysfunction, in particular those receiving insulin, are at high risk of subsequent mortality and cardiovascular events and thus require intensive risk factor modification, as well as evaluation for novel therapies.
糖尿病是冠心病发生的主要危险因素。在心肌梗死(MI)后存活的糖尿病患者中,关于其后续发病率和死亡率的了解较少。我们评估了糖尿病对心肌梗死后左心室功能不全患者心血管事件和死亡的影响。
“生存与心室扩大”试验是一项随机、双盲、安慰剂对照的多中心试验,评估卡托普利与安慰剂对2231例急性心肌梗死后左心室功能不全(定义为射血分数小于或等于40%)患者的疗效。患者在心肌梗死后3至16天被随机分配至卡托普利组或安慰剂组,并随访2至5年(平均3.5年)。
在2231例患者中,496例(22.2%)有糖尿病病史,其中168例(33.9%)接受胰岛素治疗。糖尿病患者年龄显著更大;女性更多;有既往心肌梗死或高血压病史;肥胖或表现为Killip分级II级或更高;收缩压、脉压和心率更高,射血分数更低。在随访期间,31.3%的糖尿病患者和20.1%的非糖尿病患者死亡(P<0.001)。此外,50%的糖尿病患者至少发生1次主要心血管事件,而非糖尿病患者为32.3%(P<0.001)。在对基线特征的所有显著差异进行校正的多变量分析中,糖尿病患者的总死亡率高39%(P = 0.001),心血管事件多49%(P = 0.001)。在糖尿病患者中,基线胰岛素治疗与更高的死亡风险(41.1%对26.2%;P = 0.001)和心血管事件风险(58.3%对45.7%;P = 0.008)相关。
在心肌梗死后伴有左心室功能不全的存活患者中,即使在控制了其他危险因素的差异后,糖尿病仍增加了全因死亡风险。接受胰岛素治疗的糖尿病患者死亡风险尤其更高。心肌梗死后伴有左心室功能不全的糖尿病存活患者,尤其是接受胰岛素治疗的患者,后续死亡和心血管事件风险高,因此需要强化危险因素干预,以及评估新的治疗方法。