Leeds Institute for Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, U.K.
Diabetes Care. 2023 Aug 1;46(8):1531-1540. doi: 10.2337/dc23-0294.
Obesity and diabetes frequently coexist, yet their individual contributions to cardiovascular risk remain debated. We explored cardiovascular disease biomarkers, events, and mortality in the UK Biobank stratified by BMI and diabetes.
A total of 451,355 participants were stratified by ethnicity-specific BMI categories (normal, overweight, obese) and diabetes status. We examined cardiovascular biomarkers including carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT), arterial stiffness, left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), and cardiac contractility index (CCI). Poisson regression models estimated adjusted incidence rate ratios (IRRs) for myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular death, with normal-weight nondiabetes as comparator.
Five percent of participants had diabetes (10% normal weight, 34% overweight, and 55% obese vs. 34%, 43%, and 23%, respectively, without diabetes). In the nondiabetes group, overweight/obesity was associated with higher CIMT, arterial stiffness, and CCI and lower LVEF (P < 0.005); these relationships were diminished in the diabetes group. Within BMI classes, diabetes was associated with adverse cardiovascular biomarker phenotype (P < 0.005), particularly in the normal-weight group. After 5,323,190 person-years follow-up, incident myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke, and cardiovascular mortality rose across increasing BMI categories without diabetes (P < 0.005); this was comparable in the diabetes groups (P-interaction > 0.05). Normal-weight diabetes had comparable adjusted cardiovascular mortality to obese nondiabetes (IRR 1.22 [95% CI 0.96-1.56]; P = 0.1).
Obesity and diabetes are additively associated with adverse cardiovascular biomarkers and mortality risk. While adiposity metrics are more strongly correlated with cardiovascular biomarkers than diabetes-oriented metrics, both correlate weakly, suggesting that other factors underpin the high cardiovascular risk of normal-weight diabetes.
肥胖症和糖尿病常同时存在,但它们对心血管风险的各自影响仍存在争议。我们探讨了英国生物库中根据 BMI 和糖尿病对心血管疾病生物标志物、事件和死亡率进行分层的情况。
共纳入 451355 名参与者,按种族特异性 BMI 类别(正常、超重、肥胖)和糖尿病状态分层。我们检查了心血管生物标志物,包括颈动脉内膜中层厚度(CIMT)、动脉僵硬度、左心室射血分数(LVEF)和心脏收缩力指数(CCI)。使用泊松回归模型,以正常体重非糖尿病患者为参照,估计心肌梗死、缺血性卒中和心血管死亡的调整发病率比(IRR)。
5%的参与者患有糖尿病(10%为正常体重,34%为超重,55%为肥胖,而无糖尿病的参与者分别为 34%、43%和 23%)。在非糖尿病组中,超重/肥胖与更高的 CIMT、动脉僵硬和 CCI 以及更低的 LVEF 相关(P<0.005);而在糖尿病组中,这些关系则减弱。在 BMI 类别内,糖尿病与不良心血管生物标志物表型相关(P<0.005),尤其是在正常体重组中。随访 5323190 人年期间,在无糖尿病的情况下,随着 BMI 类别的增加,心肌梗死、缺血性卒中和心血管死亡率均上升(P<0.005);而在糖尿病组中,情况类似(P 交互作用>0.05)。正常体重的糖尿病患者的心血管死亡率与肥胖的非糖尿病患者相当(调整后 IRR 为 1.22[95%CI 0.96-1.56];P=0.1)。
肥胖症和糖尿病与不良心血管生物标志物和死亡率风险呈相加关系。虽然肥胖指标与心血管生物标志物的相关性强于糖尿病指标,但两者相关性较弱,提示其他因素也与正常体重的糖尿病患者的高心血管风险有关。