Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2024 May;12(5):306-319. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(24)00040-8. Epub 2024 Mar 27.
Previous meta-analyses of summary data from randomised controlled trials have shown that statin therapy increases the risk of diabetes, but less is known about the size or timing of this effect, or who is at greatest risk. We aimed to address these gaps in knowledge through analysis of individual participant data from large, long-term, randomised, double-blind trials of statin therapy.
We conducted a meta-analysis of individual participant data from randomised controlled trials of statin therapy that participated in the CTT Collaboration. All double-blind randomised controlled trials of statin therapy of at least 2 years' scheduled duration and with at least 1000 participants were eligible for inclusion in this meta-analysis. All recorded diabetes-related adverse events, treatments, and measures of glycaemia were sought from eligible trials. Meta-analyses assessed the effects of allocation to statin therapy on new-onset diabetes (defined by diabetes-related adverse events, use of new glucose-lowering medications, glucose concentrations, or HbA values) and on worsening glycaemia in people with diabetes (defined by complications of glucose control, increased use of glucose-lowering medication, or HbA increase of ≥0·5%). Standard inverse-variance-weighted meta-analyses of the effects on these outcomes were conducted according to a prespecified protocol.
Of the trials participating in the CTT Collaboration, 19 trials compared statin versus placebo (123 940 participants, 25 701 [21%] with diabetes; median follow-up of 4·3 years), and four trials compared more versus less intensive statin therapy (30 724 participants, 5340 [17%] with diabetes, median follow-up of 4·9 years). Compared with placebo, allocation to low-intensity or moderate-intensity statin therapy resulted in a 10% proportional increase in new-onset diabetes (2420 of 39 179 participants assigned to receive a statin [1·3% per year] vs 2214 of 39 266 participants assigned to receive placebo [1·2% per year]; rate ratio [RR] 1·10, 95% CI 1·04-1·16), and allocation to high-intensity statin therapy resulted in a 36% proportional increase (1221 of 9935 participants assigned to receive a statin [4·8% per year] vs 905 of 9859 participants assigned to receive placebo [3·5% per year]; 1·36, 1·25-1·48). For each trial, the rate of new-onset diabetes among participants allocated to receive placebo depended mostly on the proportion of participants who had at least one follow-up HbA measurement; this proportion was much higher in the high-intensity than the low-intensity or moderate-intensity trials. Consequently, the main determinant of the magnitude of the absolute excesses in the two types of trial was the extent of HbA measurement rather than the proportional increase in risk associated with statin therapy. In participants without baseline diabetes, mean glucose increased by 0·04 mmol/L with both low-intensity or moderate-intensity (95% CI 0·03-0·05) and high-intensity statins (0·02-0·06), and mean HbA increased by 0·06% (0·00-0·12) with low-intensity or moderate-intensity statins and 0·08% (0·07-0·09) with high-intensity statins. Among those with a baseline measure of glycaemia, approximately 62% of new-onset diabetes cases were among participants who were already in the top quarter of the baseline distribution. The relative effects of statin therapy on new-onset diabetes were similar among different types of participants and over time. Among participants with baseline diabetes, the RRs for worsening glycaemia were 1·10 (1·06-1·14) for low-intensity or moderate-intensity statin therapy and 1·24 (1·06-1·44) for high-intensity statin therapy compared with placebo.
Statins cause a moderate dose-dependent increase in new diagnoses of diabetes that is consistent with a small upwards shift in glycaemia, with the majority of new diagnoses of diabetes occurring in people with baseline glycaemic markers that are close to the diagnostic threshold for diabetes. Importantly, however, any theoretical adverse effects of statins on cardiovascular risk that might arise from these small increases in glycaemia (or, indeed, from any other mechanism) are already accounted for in the overall reduction in cardiovascular risk that is seen with statin therapy in these trials. These findings should further inform clinical guidelines regarding clinical management of people taking statin therapy.
British Heart Foundation, UK Medical Research Council, and Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.
既往对随机对照试验汇总数据的荟萃分析表明,他汀类药物治疗会增加糖尿病风险,但对于这种效应的程度、发生时间,以及哪些人风险最高,人们了解较少。我们旨在通过分析他汀类药物治疗的大型、长期、随机、双盲试验的个体参与者数据,来填补这些知识空白。
我们对参与胆固醇治疗试验(CTT)协作组的他汀类药物治疗随机对照试验的个体参与者数据进行了荟萃分析。所有计划疗程至少2年且参与者至少有1000人的他汀类药物治疗双盲随机对照试验均符合纳入本荟萃分析的条件。我们从符合条件的试验中查找所有记录的与糖尿病相关的不良事件、治疗方法及血糖测量指标。荟萃分析评估了他汀类药物治疗分配对新发糖尿病(由与糖尿病相关的不良事件、新使用的降糖药物、血糖浓度或糖化血红蛋白[HbA]值定义)以及糖尿病患者血糖恶化(由血糖控制并发症、降糖药物使用增加或HbA升高≥0.5%定义)的影响。根据预先指定的方案,对这些结局的影响进行了标准的逆方差加权荟萃分析。
在参与CTT协作组的试验中,19项试验比较了他汀类药物与安慰剂(123940名参与者,25701名[21%]患有糖尿病;中位随访4.3年),4项试验比较了强化与非强化他汀类药物治疗(30724名参与者,5340名[17%]患有糖尿病,中位随访4.9年)。与安慰剂相比,分配接受低强度或中等强度他汀类药物治疗使新发糖尿病比例增加了10%(分配接受他汀类药物的39179名参与者中有2420名[每年1.3%],分配接受安慰剂的39266名参与者中有2214名[每年1.2%];率比[RR]1.10,95%置信区间[CI]1.04 - 1.16),分配接受高强度他汀类药物治疗使新发糖尿病比例增加了36%(分配接受他汀类药物的9935名参与者中有1221名[每年4.8%],分配接受安慰剂的9859名参与者中有905名[每年3.5%];RR 1.36,95%CI 1.25 - 1.48)。对于每项试验,分配接受安慰剂的参与者中,新发糖尿病发生率主要取决于至少有一次随访HbA测量的参与者比例;该比例在高强度试验中比低强度或中等强度试验中高得多。因此,两种类型试验中绝对超额数大小的主要决定因素是HbA测量的范围,而非他汀类药物治疗相关的风险比例增加。在无基线糖尿病的参与者中,低强度或中等强度他汀类药物(95%CI 0.03 - 0.05)和高强度他汀类药物(0.02 - 0.06)治疗后平均血糖均升高0.04 mmol/L,低强度或中等强度他汀类药物治疗后平均HbA升高0.06%(0.00 - 0.12),高强度他汀类药物治疗后平均HbA升高0.08%(0.07 - 0.09)。在有基线血糖测量的参与者中,约62%的新发糖尿病病例出现在基线分布处于上四分位的参与者中。他汀类药物治疗对新发糖尿病的相对影响在不同类型参与者及不同时间相似。在有基线糖尿病的参与者中,与安慰剂相比,低强度或中等强度他汀类药物治疗血糖恶化的RR为1.10(1.06 - 1.14),高强度他汀类药物治疗为1.24(1.06 - 1.44)。
他汀类药物导致糖尿病新诊断病例适度的剂量依赖性增加,这与血糖水平小幅上升一致,大多数糖尿病新诊断病例发生在基线血糖标志物接近糖尿病诊断阈值的人群中。然而,重要的是,在这些试验中,他汀类药物治疗所带来的总体心血管风险降低已将这些血糖小幅升高(或实际上任何其他机制)可能产生的对心血管风险的任何理论不良影响考虑在内。这些发现应为关于接受他汀类药物治疗者临床管理的临床指南提供进一步参考。
英国心脏基金会、英国医学研究委员会和澳大利亚国家卫生与医学研究委员会。