| Literature DB >> 33818704 |
Filipe M Cunha1, Catarina Cidade-Rodrigues2, Catarina Elias3, Diana Oliveira3, Paulo Bettencourt4,5, Patrícia Lourenço3,4,6.
Abstract
In diabetes mellitus (DM), glycaemic fluctuations associate with higher oxidative stress than sustained chronic hyperglycaemia and glucose variability increases the risk of chronic diabetic complications. Our hypothesis was that higher glucose variability would associate with mortality after an acute heart failure (HF) episode. We retrospectively analysed patients with DM hospitalized with acute HF between 2009 and 2010. Patients with < 2 point-of-care glucose values/day were excluded. Glucose coefficient of variation (GCV) was defined as (glucose standard deviation/mean glucose) × 100. Patients were categorized according GCV ≤ 30.0 and > 30.0%. Follow-up: 6-months. Endpoint: all-cause mortality. A Cox-regression analysis was used to study the association of glucose variability with 6-month mortality. We studied 214 diabetic patients with acute HF, 49.1% male, mean age 76 years. Mean glycaemia during hospitalization was 187 ± 50 mg/dL, hypoglycaemia (< 70 mg/dL) was reported in 21 patients and mean GCV was 28.3 ± 7.6%. Patients with GCV > 30.0% had higher mean glycaemia, more hypoglycaemic episodes and higher HbA1c; they were also more often treated with insulin. Patients were similar concerning age, gender, comorbidities, left ventricular systolic dysfunction and ischemic heart disease. During the 6-month follow-up, 38 (17.8%) patients died. Patients with GCV > 30.0% had a HR of 6-month mortality of 2.21 (95% CI: 1.16-4.21), p = 0.02. This association with more than twofold higher short-term mortality was independent of main confounders. Elevated glycaemic variability in acute HF admissions of patients with DM predicts short-term mortality. Patients with GCV > 30.0% have an independent more than twofold higher risk of 6-month death after an acute HF hospitalization.Entities:
Keywords: Coefficient of variation; Diabetes mellitus; Glycaemic variability; Heart failure; Prognosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33818704 DOI: 10.1007/s11739-021-02719-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Intern Emerg Med ISSN: 1828-0447 Impact factor: 3.397