AI Article Synopsis

  • Several studies suggest that diabetes and heart disease have similar risks for cardiovascular disease in women, but previous research lacked sufficient data on women's specific risks.
  • The RUTH trial involved over 10,000 postmenopausal women and compared outcomes of those with diabetes and those with coronary heart disease (CHD) over an average of 5.6 years.
  • The findings indicated that while diabetic women had a higher all-cause mortality risk, the risks for fatal CHD and cardiovascular disease were similar between the two groups, suggesting that diabetes serves as a significant risk factor for CHD in women.

Article Abstract

Background: Several studies have concluded that diabetes mellitus and heart disease carry similar risk for future cardiovascular disease (CVD). Most of these studies were too small to quantify independent risks specific to women. The purpose of this study was to determine whether diabetes mellitus is a coronary heart disease (CHD) risk equivalent for prediction of future CHD and CVD events in women.

Methods And Results: The Raloxifene Use for the Heart (RUTH) trial was an international, multicenter, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial of raloxifene and CVD outcomes in 10 101 postmenopausal women selected for high CHD risk. Of these, 3672 had a history of diabetes mellitus without known CHD, and 3265 had a history of CHD without known diabetes mellitus. Cox proportional hazard models were used to compare cardiovascular outcomes in these 2 groups. Mean age at baseline was 67.5 years; median follow-up was 5.6 years. There were 725 deaths, including 450 cardiovascular deaths. In age-adjusted analyses, diabetic women had an increased risk of all-cause mortality compared with women with CHD. Although the overall risk of CHD and CVD was lower in diabetic women compared with women with CHD, the risk of fatal CHD, fatal CVD, and all-cause mortality was similar (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]: 0.85 [0.65-1.12], 0.99 [0.78-1.25], and 1.18 [0.98-1.42], respectively, after adjusting for age, lifestyle factors, CHD risk factors, statin use, and treatment assignment).

Conclusions: In the RUTH trial, diabetes mellitus was a CHD risk equivalent in women for fatal, but not nonfatal, CHD and CVD.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.112.966986DOI Listing

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