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Two studies presented at last week's American Heart Association 2006 Scientific
Sessions [1,2], suggested that, two common measures of insulin resistance are
associated with poor outcomes in a "dose-response" fashion in nondiabetic
patients with heart failure,
In one of them, an analysis based on the combined interim results from two
prospective randomized trials, rates of HF hospitalization over more than two
years rose in tandem with baseline fasting plasma glucose levels in a "high-risk"
population of >30 000 diabetic and nondiabetic patients with vascular disease.
The association was significant even after adjustment for medical therapies,
diabetic status, and other components of the metabolic syndrome, reported Dr
Claes Held (Karolinska University Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden).
Similarly, the two-year rate of cardiac death went up significantly and independently
with baseline levels of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1C) in a prospective study of
several hundred patients with systolic HF. As reported by Dr Nicolas Lamblin
(Centre Hospitalier Regional Universitaire de Lille, France), baseline HbA1C
levels also seemed to predict severity of HF and other morbidity measures.
"These studies provide further evidence that insulin resistance plays
an important role in the risk of developing heart failure and the risk of mortality
once heart failure develops." "These studies have important implications
for how physicians recognize and manage patients with or at risk for heart failure,
stated Dr Gregg C Fonarow (University of California, Los Angeles Medical Center)
Definitions of diabetes are based on degree of glycemia, but patients with
glycemic indices below the arbitrary diagnostic thresholds can still be at increased
risk for worsening heart failure, according to Held. "I look at glucose
levels as I do cholesterol or blood pressure. It seems to be a continuous risk
variable." "The lower the better, to a certain limit, of course."
No one is claiming, based on current evidence, that either fasting glucose
or HbA1C is a viable target for therapy of heart failure specifically; that
would have to be established in prospective, randomized trials, all three researchers
emphasized. But both new studies are consistent with research in other populations
suggesting that insulin resistance is closely tied to HF progression. [3,4].
For example, both studies are consistent with an analysis from the randomized
Heart Outcomes Prevention Evaluation (HOPE) trial in which the risks of CV events,
HF, death, and clinically evident nephropathy were each independently associated
with rising levels of HbA1C among diabetic patients. In the same study, a mixed
cohort of diabetics and nondiabetics showed similar relationships between fasting
plasma glucose and the same set of outcomes. Observational studies have long
suggested that diabetes is common among patients with HF and may contribute
to the syndrome's progression.
Over a mean follow-up of 2.4 years, the hazard ratio for HF hospitalization
climbed 5% (95% CI 1.02-1.08, p<0.001) for each 1-mmol/L increment in the
baseline level of fasting plasma glucose, independent of diabetic status. When
outcomes were analyzed by glucose quartiles, the risk went up significantly
even at levels within the "normal" range and was more pronounced among
patients with established diabetes compared with those with diabetes diagnosed
at baseline.
The findings suggest that fasting plasma glucose independently predicts HF
hospitalization and that "the degree of dysglycemia is the key determinant
of this relationship, although they do not prove causality," Held said
during his presentation.
Interviewed, Held said other data from the same patients suggest a similar
link between baseline fasting plasma glucose levels and the composite rate of
death, MI, or stroke. "So it's not just heart failure, but the strongest
relationship is with heart failure."
Baseline levels of HbA1C were inversely related to LV systolic function and
rose with increasing ventricular dimensions and greater HF morbidity in a cohort
of consecutive nondiabetic patients with heart failure and an LVEF <45%.
The group's two-year rate of cardiac death also went up with increasing HbA1C
levels, Lamblin reported. In this analysis, cardiac death included urgent cardiac
transplantation.
"Our study shows for the first time that HbA1C levels are associated with
the severity and prognosis of heart failure in nondiabetic persons," according
to Lamblin.
Fonarow noted that the study's "minor elevations" in HbA1C were "strongly
linked to increased heart-failure severity. So whether this is merely another
indicator of heart-failure severity or providing a truly independent mediator
needs further study. Furthermore, knowing how best to lower this risk requires
further studies, as trials of glycemic-control medications have generally excluded
patients with preexisting heart failure."
1. Held C, Gerstein HC, Zhao F, et al. Fasting plasma glucose is an independent
predictor of hospitalization for congestive heart failure in high-risk patients.
American Heart Association 2006 Scientific Sessions; November 13, 2006. Abstract
2562.
2. Lamblin N, Bauters C. Hemoglobin A1c levels are associated with severity
and prognosis of systolic chronic heart failure in nondiabetic patients. American
Heart Association 2006 Scientific Sessions; November 13, 2006. Abstract 2372.
3. Gerstein HC, Pogue J, Mann JF, et al. The relationship between dysglycemia
and cardiovascular and renal risk in diabetic and non-diabetic participants
in the HOPE study: A prospective epidemiological analysis. Diabetologia 2005;
48:1749-1755.
4. Barsheshet A, Garty M, Grossman E, et al. Admission blood glucose level and
mortality among hospitalized nondiabetic patients with heart failure. Arch
Intern Med 2006; 166:1613-1619.
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