Jones Teresa L Z, Kusmartseva Irina, Litovsky Silvio, Thakar Rahul, Posgai Amanda L, Eckel Robert H, Atkinson Mark A
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, Bethesda, MD.
Department of Pathology, Immunology, and Laboratory Medicine, Diabetes Institute, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL.
Diabetes. 2025 Apr 24. doi: 10.2337/db25-0017.
Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in individuals with diabetes. Individuals with type 1 diabetes have a two- to fourfold higher risk of CVD in comparison with the general population, driven by an earlier onset and increased lifetime incidence of CVD events and mortality. Similarly, type 2 diabetes confers two- to threefold increased CVD risk, usually alongside metabolic syndrome, obesity, and hypertension. Despite advancements in methods for achieving glycemic control, the CVD burden remains disproportionately high in diabetes. The mechanisms driving elevated risk are complex and variably multifactorial, involving hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, inflammation, and a hypercoagulable state. Unfortunately, critical gaps in understanding persist on how these factors interact to promote CVD in type 1 versus type 2 diabetes, particularly across disease stages and age. Addressing these knowledge gaps is essential to developing targeted therapies that can effectively mitigate CVD risk. To meet this need, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, in partnership with the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, recently formed the Cardiovascular Repository for Type 1 Diabetes (CaRe-T1D) program. Its mission is to elucidate the molecular and cellular pathways linking diabetes with CVD through the provision of high-quality human tissues for investigator-led analyses using cutting-edge technologies and collaborative data sharing to advance precision medicine and reduce the global burden of diabetes-associated cardiovascular complications.
CaRe-T1D established a biorepository and scientific consortium to advance research on cardiovascular complications in diabetes. The goal is to determine how cardiovascular disease differs in type 1 versus type 2 diabetes. Heart, kidney, carotid and peripheral arteries, and blood from organ donors with type 1 diabetes, with type 2 diabetes, or without diabetes will be distributed to approved investigators to address the pathogenesis of diabetic cardiovascular disease. CaRe-T1D is a resource of human cardiovascular tissue and a database with the results from tissue analysis.
心血管疾病(CVD)是糖尿病患者发病和死亡的主要原因。1型糖尿病患者患心血管疾病的风险比普通人群高两到四倍,这是由心血管疾病事件和死亡率的发病较早及终身发病率增加所致。同样,2型糖尿病使心血管疾病风险增加两到三倍,通常还伴有代谢综合征、肥胖和高血压。尽管在实现血糖控制的方法上取得了进展,但糖尿病患者的心血管疾病负担仍然过高。导致风险升高的机制复杂且多因素各异,涉及高血糖、胰岛素抵抗、血脂异常、炎症和高凝状态。不幸的是,对于这些因素如何相互作用以促进1型糖尿病与2型糖尿病患者的心血管疾病,尤其是在不同疾病阶段和年龄方面,仍存在关键的认知空白。填补这些知识空白对于开发能够有效降低心血管疾病风险的靶向治疗方法至关重要。为满足这一需求,美国国立糖尿病、消化和肾脏疾病研究所与国立心脏、肺和血液研究所合作,最近成立了1型糖尿病心血管储存库(CaRe-T1D)项目。其任务是通过提供高质量的人体组织,供研究人员使用前沿技术进行分析,并通过协作数据共享来推进精准医学,减少糖尿病相关心血管并发症的全球负担,从而阐明将糖尿病与心血管疾病联系起来的分子和细胞途径。
CaRe-T1D建立了一个生物样本库和科学联盟,以推进糖尿病心血管并发症的研究。目标是确定1型糖尿病与2型糖尿病中心血管疾病的差异。来自1型糖尿病、2型糖尿病或无糖尿病器官捐赠者的心脏、肾脏、颈动脉和外周动脉以及血液将分发给经批准的研究人员,以研究糖尿病心血管疾病的发病机制。CaRe-T1D是人体心血管组织资源以及一个包含组织分析结果的数据库。