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Common Test could help predict Early Death
in Diabetes
Newswise, May 24,2011– New findings out of
Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center reveal
that a common test may be useful in
predicting early death in individuals with
diabetes.
The study appears in the May issue of Diabetes
Care.
“People with diabetes are already at high
risk of developing heart disease and
experiencing an early death,” said Donald W.
Bowden, Ph.D., the director of the Center
for Diabetes Research at Wake Forest Baptist
and lead investigator.
“With this study, we’ve discovered that we
can identify a subset of individuals within
this high risk group who are at even higher
risk, and the means to do this is already
widely available in the form of a computed
tomography (CT) scan – a relatively
inexpensive and non-invasive test.”
More than 25 million Americans – 8.3 percent
of the population – are currently living
with diabetes, according to the National
Institutes of Health. People with the
condition are at increased risk of
developing heart and vascular disease and,
while vascular disease is common in the
general population, it is twice as common in
people with diabetes.
At least 60 percent of diabetes patients –
even those on dialysis for kidney failure –
ultimately die of a vascular event, such as
heart attack or stroke. However, Bowden
said, questions about why so many diabetes
patients die early have remained unanswered
in the medical community’s understanding of
the disease.
For the Diabetes Heart Study, Bowden and
colleagues have been following nearly 1,500
patients with diabetes in North Carolina for
about 13 years, gathering data on various
aspects of the disease and how it affects
individual health. As original study
participants began to die, the researchers
sought to understand why.
“When we reviewed the data last year, we
were shocked by the number of participants
who had already died during this study,”
Bowden said.
“We wanted to find out if there were any
predictors of who would succumb versus those
who are still living. In a group of people
who are already at high risk, we were
looking for a way to identify which
individuals were at even higher risk for
early death, with the goal of finding
interventions or ways to focus medical care
and attention toward those individuals at
highest risk.”
A high coronary artery calcium (CAC) score
is known to be a strong indicator of
coronary heart disease. The score provides a
measure of how much coronary artery disease,
or calcified “plaque” is present in the
blood vessels of the heart.
Plaque plays a major role in heart attacks
and other vascular events and can be
measured by taking a special “gated” CT scan
which, in comparison to typical CT scans,
uses very few X-rays, does not require any
injections and generally takes less than 10
minutes to perform. At Wake Forest Baptist,
the test costs just over $200 and some
insurance companies will cover the exam in
appropriate situations.
Within the diabetes-affected population,
there is a very wide range of calcified
plaque buildup in the arteries and the
heart, from individuals with none at all, to
people whose entire vessels are nearly
completely calcified. The researchers
separated more than 1,000 study participants
into five groups, according to the amount of
calcified plaque they had in their blood
vessels at the beginning of the study.
The health of those participants was then
followed for an average of 7.4 years before
researchers compared the data from those who
died during the study to those who are still
living.
“We saw a dramatic risk of dying earlier in
the people with highest levels of calcified
plaque in their blood vessels,” Bowden said.
“When comparing the group with the highest
amount of plaque to the group that had the
lowest amount of calcified plaque, the risk
of dying was more than six times greater in
the group with high levels of calcified
plaque. The difference in risk that we
revealed is striking.
"It’s
in a group of people who are already at
risk, but the CAC level really rather
dramatically differentiates risk between
people within this high risk group. This
finding could have novel clinical
implications.”
Diabetes is associated with many other
medical problems, Bowden said, so
identifying a way to determine who is at
highest risk and who needs the most
intensive medical monitoring and care is
especially important.
“The striking magnitude of the risk suggests
very strongly that other research samples
should be evaluated, especially in
individuals with diabetes,” he said.
The study was funded by the National Heart,
Lung, and Blood Institute, as well as the
General Clinical Research Center of Wake
Forest Baptist. Co-authors are: Subhashish
Agarwal, M.D., Timothy Morgan, Ph.D., David
M. Herrington, M.D., M.H.S., Jianzhao Xu,
B.S., Amanda J. Cox, Ph.D., Barry I.
Freedman, M.D., and J. Jeffrey Carr, M.D.,
M.S.C.E., all of Wake Forest Baptist.
Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center (www.wakehealth.edu)
is a fully integrated academic medical
center located in Winston-Salem, N.C. Wake
Forest School of Medicine directs the
education and research components, with the
medical school ranked among the nation’s
best and recognized as a leading research
center in regenerative medicine, cancer, the
neurosciences, aging, addiction and public
health sciences.
Piedmont Triad Research Park, a division of
Wake Forest Baptist, fosters biotechnology
innovation in an urban park community. Wake
Forest Baptist Health, the clinical
enterprise, includes a flagship tertiary
care hospital for adults, Brenner Children’s
Hospital, a network of affiliated
community-based hospitals, physician
practices and outpatient services.
The institution’s clinical programs and the
medical school are consistently recognized
as among the best in the country by U.S.News
& World Report.
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