AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the differences in the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) between patients with diabetes and those without, based on the total perfusion deficit (TPD) during myocardial imaging.
  • It found that patients with diabetes had a higher risk of MACE at every level of TPD, with those having more severe ischemia facing more than double the risk compared to non-diabetic patients.
  • Even minimal ischemia in diabetic patients (TPD < 1%) was associated with a high risk of MACE, suggesting that diabetic individuals are at increased cardiovascular risk even with slight perfusion issues.

Article Abstract

Objective: Prevalence and prognostic impact of cardiovascular disease differ between patients with or without diabetes. We aimed to explore differences in the prevalence and prognosis of myocardial ischemia by automated quantification of total perfusion deficit (TPD) among patients with and without diabetes.

Research Design And Methods: Of 20,418 individuals who underwent single-photon emission computed tomography myocardial perfusion imaging, 2,951 patients with diabetes were matched to 2,951 patients without diabetes based on risk factors using propensity score. TPD was categorized as TPD = 0%, 0% < TPD < 1%, 1% ≤ TPD < 5%, 5% ≤ TPD ≤ 10%, and TPD >10%. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) were defined as a composite of all-cause mortality, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, or late revascularization.

Results: MACE risk was increased in patients with diabetes compared with patients without diabetes at each level of TPD above 0 ( < 0.001 for interaction). In patients with TPD >10%, patients with diabetes had greater than twice the MACE risk compared with patients without diabetes (annualized MACE rate 9.4 [95% CI 6.7-11.6] and 3.9 [95% CI 2.8-5.6], respectively, < 0.001). Patients with diabetes with even very minimal TPD (0% < TPD < 1%) experienced a higher risk for MACE than those with 0% TPD (hazard ratio 2.05 [95% CI 1.21-3.47], = 0.007). Patients with diabetes with a TPD of 0.5% had a similar MACE risk as patients without diabetes with a TPD of 8%.

Conclusions: For every level of TPD >0%, even a very minimal deficit of 0% < TPD < 1%, the MACE risk was higher in the patients with diabetes compared with patients without diabetes. Patients with diabetes with minimal ischemia had comparable MACE risk as patients without diabetes with significant ischemia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6971784PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc19-1360DOI Listing

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