Goyal Abhinav, Mehta Shamir R, Gerstein Hertzel C, Díaz Rafael, Afzal Rizwan, Xavier Denis, Zhu Jun, Pais Prem, Lisheng Liu, Kazmi Khawar A, Zubaid Mohammad, Piegas Leopoldo S, Widimsky Petr, Budaj Andrzej, Avezum Alvaro, Yusuf Salim
Population Health Research Institute, Hamilton Health Sciences, Ontario, Canada.
Am Heart J. 2009 Apr;157(4):763-70. doi: 10.1016/j.ahj.2008.12.007. Epub 2009 Feb 20.
Both a history of diabetes mellitus and elevated inhospital glucose levels predict death after acute myocardial infarction (AMI). However, only diabetes history (and not glucose levels) is routinely considered in AMI risk assessment.
We conducted a post hoc analysis of 2 randomized controlled trials of AMI with ST-segment elevation to compare the prognostic value of inhospital glucose levels with diabetes history in 30,536 subjects. Average inhospital glucose (mean of glucose levels at admission, 6 hours, and 24 hours), diabetes history, and death at 30 days (occurring in 2,808 subjects) were documented.
Average glucose predicted 30-day death (OR 1.10 per 1-mmol/L [18-mg/dL] increase, 95% CI 1.09-1.11, P < .0001); this was unchanged after adjusting for diabetes history. In contrast, diabetes history alone predicted 30-day death (OR 1.63, 95% CI 1.48-1.78, P < .0001), but not after adjusting for average glucose (OR 0.98, 95% CI 0.88-1.09, P = .72). The C-indices (areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves) for 30-day death were 0.54 for diabetes history alone, 0.64 for average glucose alone, and 0.64 for glucose plus diabetes. Higher glucose levels predicted death in patients with and without diabetes history, but this relationship was more steep in nondiabetic subjects such that their rate of 30-day death (13.2%) matched that of diabetic patients (13.7%) when average glucose was > or =144 mg/dL (8 mmol/L) (P = .55 after multivariable adjustment).
Although diabetes history is routinely considered in the risk stratification of AMI patients, inhospital glucose levels are a much stronger predictor of death and should be incorporated in their risk assessment. Patients with AMI with inhospital glucose > or =144 mg/dL have a very high risk of death regardless of diabetes history.
糖尿病病史和住院期间血糖水平升高均预示急性心肌梗死(AMI)后死亡。然而,在AMI风险评估中通常仅考虑糖尿病病史(而非血糖水平)。
我们对两项ST段抬高型AMI的随机对照试验进行事后分析,以比较30536名受试者中住院期间血糖水平与糖尿病病史的预后价值。记录平均住院血糖(入院时、6小时和24小时血糖水平的平均值)、糖尿病病史以及30天死亡情况(2808名受试者发生死亡)。
平均血糖可预测30天死亡(每增加1 mmol/L[18 mg/dL],OR为1.10,95%CI为1.09 - 1.11,P <.0001);在调整糖尿病病史后这一结果无变化。相比之下,仅糖尿病病史可预测30天死亡(OR为1.63,95%CI为1.48 - 1.78,P <.0001),但在调整平均血糖后则不能(OR为0.98,95%CI为0.88 - 1.09,P =.72)。30天死亡的C指数(受试者工作特征曲线下面积),仅糖尿病病史为0.54,仅平均血糖为0.64,血糖加糖尿病为0.64。较高的血糖水平在有和无糖尿病病史的患者中均预示死亡,但这种关系在非糖尿病受试者中更显著,以至于当平均血糖≥144 mg/dL(8 mmol/L)时,他们的30天死亡率(13.2%)与糖尿病患者(13.7%)相当(多变量调整后P =.55)。
尽管在AMI患者的风险分层中通常会考虑糖尿病病史,但住院期间血糖水平是死亡的更强预测因素,应纳入其风险评估。住院血糖≥144 mg/dL的AMI患者无论有无糖尿病病史,死亡风险都非常高。