Cardiac Events in 735 Type 2 Diabetic Patients Who Underwent Screening for Unknown Asymptomatic Coronary Heart Disease
5-year follow-up report from the Milan Study on Atherosclerosis and Diabetes (MiSAD)
- Ezio Faglia, MD1,
- Fabrizio Favales, MD2,
- Patrizia Calia, MD2,
- Felice Paleari, MD3,
- Giovanni Segalini, MD3,
- Pier Luigi Gamba, MD4,
- Alberto Rocca, MD4,
- Nicoletta Musacchio, MD4,
- Arturo Mastropasqua, MD5,
- Gianpaolo Testori, MD6,
- Pietro Rampini, MD6,
- Flavia Moratti, MD7,
- Anna Braga, MD7 and
- Alberto Morabito, PHD8
- 1Policlinico Multimedica, Internal Medicine Unit-Diabetology Center, Sesto San Giovanni, Milan, Italy
- 2Niguarda Hospital, Internal Medicine Unit, Milan, Italy
- 3S. Gerardo Hospital, Diabetology Unit-Internal Medicine Departement, Monza, Milan, Italy
- 4E. Bassini Hospital, Diabetology Center, Cinisello Balsamo, Milan, Italy
- 5G. Salvini Hospital, Diabetology Center, Garbagnate Milanese, Milan, Italy
- 6Fatebenefratelli Hospital, Diabetology Unit, Milan, Italy
- 7Legnano Hospital, Diabetology Center-Internal Medicine Unit, Legnano, Milan, Italy
- 8S. Paolo Hospital, Milan University, Departement of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry, Milan, Italy
Abstract
OBJECTIVE—To report the cardiac events in type 2 diabetic outpatients screened for unknown asymptomatic coronary heart disease (CHD) and followed for 5 years.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS—During 1993, 925 subjects aged 40–65 years underwent an exercise treadmill test (ETT). If it was abnormal, the subjects then underwent an exercise scintigraphy. Of the 925 subjects, 735 were followed for 5 years and cardiac events were recorded.
RESULTS—At the entry of the study, 638 of the 735 followed subjects had normal ETT, 45 had abnormal ETT with normal scintigraphy, and 52 had abnormal ETT and abnormal scintigraphy. The 52 subjects with abnormal scintigraphy and ETT underwent a cardiological and diabetological follow-up; the subjects with just abnormal ETT had a diabetological follow-up only. During the follow-ups, 42 cardiac events occurred: 1 fatal myocardial infarction (MI), 20 nonfatal MIs, and 10 cases of angina in the 638 subjects with normal ETT; 1 fatal MI in the 45 subjects with normal scintigraphy; and 1 fatal MI and 9 cases of angina in the 52 subjects with abnormal scintigraphy. In these 52 subjects all cardiac events were significantly more frequent (χ2 = 21.40, P < 0.0001) but the ratio of major (cardiac death and MI) to minor (angina) cardiac events was significantly lower (P = 0.002). Scintigraphy abnormality (hazard ratio 5.47; P < 0.001; 95% CI 2.43–12.29), diabetes duration (1.06; P = 0.021; 1.008–1.106), and diabetic retinopathy (2.371; P = 0.036; 1.059–5.307) were independent predictors of cardiac events on multivariate analysis.
CONCLUSIONS—The low ratio of major to minor cardiac events in the positive scintigraphy group may suggest, although it does not prove, that the screening program followed by appropriate management was effective for the reduction of risk of major cardiac events.
- CHD, coronary heart disease
- ECG, electrocardiogram
- ETT, exercise treadmill test
- MI, myocardial infarction
- MiSAD, Milan Study on Atherosclerosis and Diabetes
Footnotes
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Address correspondence and reprint requests to Ezio Faglia, Internal Medicine Unit, Diabetology Center, Policlinico MultiMedica, Via Milanese 300, 20099 Sesto San Giovanni (Milano), Italy. E-mail: ezio.faglia{at}multimedica.it.
Received for publication 3 August 2001 and accepted in revised form 4 August 2002.
A table elsewhere in this issue shows conventional and Système International (SI) units and conversion factors for many substances.
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