1. Incident cardiovascular disease by clustering of favourable risk factors in type 1 diabetes
- Author
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Soulimane, S., Balkau, B., Vogtschmidt, Y.D., Toeller, M., Fuller, J.H., Soedamah-Muthu, S.S., and Medical and Clinical Psychology
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,EUROPE ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Blood Pressure ,HEART-DISEASE ,Young Adult ,Internal Medicine ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,HbA(1c) ,SOCIOECONOMIC-STATUS ,Prospective Studies ,ALL-CAUSE MORTALITY ,ASSOCIATIONS ,OUTCOMES ,ADULTS ,TRENDS ,Cholesterol ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 ,PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY ,Type 1 diabetes ,Risk factors ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Female ,HEALTH ,Cardiovascular health metrics - Abstract
Aims The aim of this prospective study was to examine CVD risk reduction in type 1 diabetes (1) for people with favourable cardiovascular health metrics and (2) by clustering of these metrics. Methods Data from 2313 participants from the EURODIAB Prospective Complications Study were analysed. All had type 1 diabetes (51% men, mean ± SD age 32 ± 9 years). Seven cardiovascular health metrics were studied—smoking, BMI, physical activity, a diet score, total cholesterol/HDL-cholesterol ratio, combined systolic and diastolic BP and HbA1c—divided into favourable/less favourable categories. Cox proportional hazards models were used to calculate HRs (95% CIs) of incident CVD for each metric. Clusters were made by scoring each individual by the number of favourable metrics. Results A total of 163 people developed incident CVD during a mean ± SD follow-up of 7.2 ± 1.3 years. Participants with more favourable HbA1c levels of 1c (HR [95% CI] 0.63 [0.44, 0.91]), and participants with a more favourable BP (systolic BP Conclusions/interpretation Low HbA1c and low BP were protective cardiovascular health metrics in our study of people with type 1 diabetes. Targeting all cardiovascular health metrics could be more effective in preventing CVD than targeting single metrics. Graphical abstract
- Published
- 2022
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