1 Diabetes Unit, Diabetes Center and Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
2 General Medicine Division and Department of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts
3 National Institute on Aging, Baltimore, Maryland
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ABSTRACT |
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Categories of abnormal glucose homeostasis have been defined with the goal of screening for diabetes risk (1). Impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and the more recently created category of impaired fasting glucose (IFG) identify individuals at increased risk for developing diabetes, based on postchallenge or fasting glucose levels, respectively. It has been suggested that IGT and IFG are associated with varying rates of progression to diabetes and differences in cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk.
Although the association of hyperglycemia at levels below the current diagnostic thresholds for diabetes with CVD risk has been increasingly recognized (26), the specific contributions of IFG versus IGT to CVD risk remain poorly understood. Compared with normal glucose tolerance, IGT is associated with an increased number of factors included in the metabolic syndrome (7) and an increased risk for CVD (8,9). Moreover it appears that the metabolic or cardiovascular risk factors may precede the development of IGT (10). Whether IFG confers similar CVD risk is less certain, with several studies suggesting that postprandial glycemia is more strongly associated with CVD risk than fasting glycemia (11,12). The pathophysiological differences between the two metabolic states that might explain differences in CVD outcome remain unknown.
One potential explanation for the apparent difference between IFG and IGT in determining risk for CVD may be that the previous definitions for IGT and IFG (1) created subpopulations with different prevalences and rates of progression to diabetes. Any differences in risk for CVD between IFG and IGT may be predicated on the different risk for diabetes development. The Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging (BLSA), a long-term follow-up of an adult Caucasian population, demonstrated that adjusting the diagnostic range for IFG from 6.17.0 to 5.556.1 mmol/l created a similar prevalence of IGT and IFG and, perhaps more importantly, similar progression rates to diabetes (13). To determine whether IGT and IFG are associated with differing coronary heart disease (CHD) risk, independent of the development of diabetes, we examined the prevalence of CHD risk factors and incident CHD events according to baseline IGT and IFG using current American Diabetes Association (ADA) criteria and modified criteria that used a lower cut point for IFG of 5.55 mmol/l (100 mg/dl). The lower cut point for IFG was recently adopted by the ADA (14).
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RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS |
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Our longitudinal analysis of glucose tolerance and cardiovascular risk factors over time involved 937 subjects (547 men and 390 women) who, at their initial examination, had no history of diabetes (having received treatment with insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents or having a fasting glucose level 7.0 mmol/l and/or a 2-h postchallenge glucose level of
11.1 mmol/l) or cardiovascular disease (prior myocardial infarction, revascularization procedure, or episode of congestive heart failure).
Subjects who had undergone a baseline examination and at least one additional examination (with a maximum of 4 years allowed between any two examinations) were included in this study. The examinations included an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and measurement of cardiovascular risk factors during a mean observation period of 9.5 years (range 0.930.9). The mean number of OGTT examinations was 4.2 years (range 213); the majority of examinations took place from 1977 to 1998.
For the purposes of this study, subjects were classified into categories of abnormal glucose homeostasis if they had a single abnormal fasting plasma glucose or OGTT result at baseline and/or at any point during follow-up. The categories of glucose homeostasis were defined based on 1997 ADA criteria (1) or modified criteria that have been recently adopted by the ADA (14). Using the 1997 ADA criteria, we defined normal glucose tolerance (NGT) as fasting plasma glucose (FPG) <5.55 mmol/l and 2-h plasma glucose (2hPG) concentration (2 h after an oral glucose challenge) <7.8 mmol/l, IFG as FPG 6.17.0 mmol/l and 2hPG <7.8 mmol/l, IGT as FPG <6.1 mmol/l and 2hPG 7.811.1 mmol/l, and IFG + IGT as FPG 6.17.0 mmol/l and 2hPG 7.811.1 mmol/l. Using the modified criteria, we defined NGT as FPG <5.55 mmol/l and 2hPG <7.8 mmol/l, IFG as FPG 5.557.0 mmol/l and 2hPG <7.8 mmol/l, IGT as FPG <5.55 mmol/l and 2hPG 7.811.1 mmol/l, and IFG/IGT as FPG 5.557.0 mmol/l and 2hPG 7.811.1 mmol/l. Subjects classified as having NGT by either set of criteria never had an abnormal OGTT or fasting result at baseline or during the entire follow-up period. Subjects classified as having isolated IFG never had an abnormal 2hPG value during an OGTT, and those classified as having isolated IGT never had an abnormal FPG. Those classified as having IFG + IGT had an abnormal FPG and 2hPG at baseline or at some point during follow-up. The modified criteria for plasma glucose levels were chosen a priori, before examining the CHD outcomes and CHD risk factors. The levels were chosen to incorporate the ADA definitions of diabetes and to provide exclusive IFG and IGT categories that had similar prevalence at baseline. In addition to subjects with diabetes at baseline, those who progressed to diabetes during follow-up were excluded.
Clinical examinations and coronary heart disease risk factor assessment.
The majority of examinations were performed between 1977 and 1998. Subjects were admitted to the Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging (Baltimore, MD), the night before each examination. No significant physical activity was permitted, and the subjects fasted for 912 h overnight. Blood was drawn the following morning for fasting glucose levels and fasting lipids, and an OGTT (see below) was performed. Anthropometric measurements, including height, weight, waist circumference, and blood pressure, were obtained using methods described previously (16). A smoking history was completed by each subject. Smokers were defined as subjects who currently smoked or who had quit smoking <2 years before the baseline examination.
OGTT.
Most of the OGTTs in this analysis were performed between 1977 and 1998. Before June 1977, the dosage of oral glucose used for the OGTT was 1.75 g glucose/kg body wt. This dosage was used for 5.2% of the OGTTs used in this analysis. Given that the average body weight of the male subjects during that period was 79 kg, the average oral glucose load was 138 g. In July 1977 the dosage was changed to 40 g/m2 body surface area, which in this cohort was calculated to a mean dosage of 78 g glucose in men (mean surface area 1.96 m2) (2) and 68 g in women (mean surface area 1.70 m2) (2). Of the 547 male subjects, 322 received both the 1.75 g/kg and the 40 g/m2 tests. The following mathematical formula
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Coronary heart disease.
Incident CHD events were defined as cardiac death or nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI), either clinical (chest pain accompanied by serial electrocardiogram [ECG] changes or enzyme elevation) or silent (Minnesota codes 1.1 or 1.2 on resting ECG). The diagnosis of nonfatal MI was confirmed by an independent BLSA cardiologist who also interpreted all ECGs. The cardiologist was blind to the status of subjects glucose tolerance. For deceased subjects, the cause of death was determined by consensus of three BLSA physicians who evaluated the death certificate, medical records, autopsy report, and other available information. Cardiac death was defined as death occurring during the follow-up period due to acute MI, congestive heart failure, or sudden death not attributable to another cause. CHD risk profiles were also assessed at baseline by determining the presence of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) metabolic syndrome (MetS) (17) and by calculating Framingham risk scores (FRSs) (18).
Analytical procedures.
The ferricyanide reduction method (Technico-AutoAnalyzer) of glucose analysis was used between 1964 and 1977. The glucose oxidase method was used thereafter (Beckman glucose analyzer, 19771983; Abbott Laboratories ABA 200 ATC Series II Biochromatic Analyzer, 19831992; Abbott Spectrum CCX, 1992 to present). Plasma triglyceride and total cholesterol concentrations were determined by an enzymatic method (ABA-200 ATC biochromatic analyzer; Abbott, Irving, TX). HDL cholesterol levels were determined by the dextran sulfate-magnesium precipitation procedure (19), and LDL cholesterol concentrations were estimated by the Friedewald formula (20).
Statistical analysis.
Mean baseline CHD risk factors were calculated for each category of glucose homeostasis, adjusted for age and sex, and compared across groups using ANCOVA (3 degrees of freedom). Generalized linear models were used to compare differences in incident CHD by glucose homeostasis category and also for the models that adjusted for age and sex. For categorical variables, univariate analyses were performed using 2 tests. Binomial proportions were computed to compare the prevalence of baseline glucose homeostasis categories. SAS software was used to perform the analyses (21), and statistical significance was defined as a P <0.05.
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RESULTS |
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The total number of CHD events in the study population during the mean 9.5 years of observation was small (n = 117). There was no significant difference in the age- and sex-adjusted incidence of CHD events between the IGT and IFG groups, using either the 1997 ADA or the modified criteria (Table 1). Even when the study population was increased to include those who developed diabetes during follow-up (n = 1,089), the number of CHD events remained small (n = 146) and the differences in CHD incidence among the groups, defined by the 1997 ADA or modified criteria, remained nonsignificant (data not shown).
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DISCUSSION |
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In 1997, the ADA defined IFG as an FPG concentration of 6.17.0 mmol/l (110126 mg/dl) (1). The admittedly arbitrary choice of the 6.1 mmol/l threshold was based partially on the risk of developing microvascular and macrovascular complications above this level (1). However, it has now been shown that the fasting glycemic threshold of 6.1 mmol/l does not create an equivalent category of glucose homeostasis as IGT for either the subsequent development of diabetes (13) or in terms of CHD risk factors, as shown in this study.
We followed 937 subjects longitudinally over a mean period of 9.5 years and showed that subjects with IGT, alone or in combination with IFG, had increased baseline CHD risk factors and a higher prevalence of MetS and FRS >10 compared with subjects with NGT or isolated IFG. Of note, the individuals with IGT had an increased prevalence of MetS compared with individuals with IFG, despite the fact that IFG (>6.1 mmol/l) and not impaired postchallenge glucose is one of the traits that comprise the definition of MetS according to NCEP criteria (17). Moreover, the baseline CHD risk factor profile associated with IFG was no different than that found with NGT.
It is important to note that we eliminated from our analysis those individuals who progressed to diabetes, thus avoiding the potential confounding effect of higher rates of progression to diabetes associated with IGT (13). We also analyzed the data using modified diagnostic criteria for IFG. The modified criteria we chose used a lower glucose threshold of 5.55 mmol/l to define IFG; this threshold was selected to create a similar baseline prevalence of individuals with isolated IFG and isolated IGT in our particular cohort. Even when such modified glucose criteria were used, the finding that IGT, but not IFG, was associated with increased baseline CHD risk factors persisted. Thus, risk for CHD associated with IFG appears not to be a function of any particular FPG threshold, but rather a function of concomitant IGT. IGT alone is associated with elevated CHD risk factor levels, but IFG is associated with increased risk only in combination with IGT.
The differences in CHD risk factors suggest that IGT represents a different metabolic phenotype from IFG. We have previously shown that there are differences in the natural history of IGT and IFG in terms of progression to diabetes (13). These differences, however, were to a large extent a function of the diagnostic threshold used, as using a definition of 5.556.1 mmol/l to define IFG not only equalized the prevalence of isolated IFG and isolated IGT in the cohort, but also equalized the rates of progression from IFG and IGT to diabetes (13). The phenotypic differences between IGT and IFG in terms of CHD risk factor profiles persisted, however, even when the modified criteria were used. The subjects with isolated IGT had more atherogenic profiles at baseline than those subjects with isolated IFG.
Despite the differences in CHD risk profile between the glucose-intolerant groups, the incidence of CHD events was not significantly different. Our inability to demonstrate a significant difference in CHD events was probably attributable to the modest number of events during the follow-up period and the relatively young average age of the population. The differences in CHD risk factors will probably translate into differences in outcomes with further follow-up.
Some, but not all, cross-sectional studies have suggested differences in other atherogenic traits between IGT and IFG. Elevated C-reactive protein (CRP) levels have been demonstrated in individuals with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes and IGT (22), but not with IFG (23). A direct comparison of CRP levels in association with postchallenge glycemia versus fasting glycemia has demonstrated a greater association between CRP and postchallenge glycemia (24). On the other hand, a recent study by Hanefeld et al. (25) did not demonstrate any differences in lipid (other than free fatty acid) or blood pressure levels between IFG and IGT, with both categories being defined using the 1997 ADA criteria (1).
The BLSA is a unique cohort in that subjects are being followed longitudinally with biannual examinations, including repeated OGTTs and assessment of CHD risk factors, some for as long as 30 years. This enables us to track changes in both glucose homeostasis and CHD risk over time; we could also eliminate subjects who developed diabetes and examine the course of IGT and IFG in the absence of diabetes. However, the BLSA is not without limitations. A variable dosage of glucose (graded according to body surface area) was used to assess glucose tolerance in these individuals. In addition, we defined the categories of glucose homeostasis based on the results of a single OGTT at baseline or during follow-up, which might overestimate the prevalence of abnormal glucose homeostasis in the cohort. Although the BLSA glucose testing results may not be strictly comparable with the results of other studies, neither of the factors noted above should affect the comparison of NGT, IFG, and IGT within the current study.
The differences between IGT and IFG with regard to CVD risk may have major clinical implications. The use of the current ADA recommended approach to screen for diabetes will miss those individuals with isolated IGT and will not discriminate those with isolated IFG from those with IFG + IGT, the latter of whom are at higher risk for CHD. The most recent change in ADA diagnostic criteria for IFG, in which the threshold for IFG was lowered to 5.55 mmol/l (100 mg/dl) (14), still misses the increased CHD risk associated with IGT, as IGT will be undetected if OGTTs continue to be discouraged.
Our findings are of relevance not only in terms of screening strategies for diabetes and pre-diabetes categories, such as IFG and IGT, but also in terms of primary prevention of CHD in these individuals. Currently, diabetes is considered a CHD risk equivalent (17), and individuals with diabetes and pre-diabetes are aggressively targeted with strategies to lower CHD risk. In this regard, because IFG per se does not appear to be associated with increased CHD risk factor levels, it may be that individuals with isolated IFG need no longer be considered at greater risk for CHD than those with NGT. Further long-term follow-up is needed to determine if this difference in baseline CHD risk factor levels will translate to a difference in CHD end points.
In summary, we have shown that IGT, compared with NGT or isolated IFG, is associated with elevated baseline CHD risk factors, even when IFG is redefined with a lower fasting glucose threshold to create a similar baseline prevalence as IGT and similar rates of progression to diabetes. The CHD risk profile associated with IFG is not statistically different from that associated with NGT. Thus individuals with IGT should be more aggressively targeted with strategies to lower CHD risk than those with IFG.
Address correspondence and reprint requests to David M. Nathan, MD, Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Bulfinch 408, Boston, MA 02114. E-mail: dnathan{at}partners.org
Received for publication January 13, 2004 and accepted in revised form May 17, 2004
2hPG, 2-h plasma glucose concentration; ADA, American Diabetes Association; ATP III, Adult Treatment Panel III; BLSA, Baltimore Longitudinal Study on Aging; CHD, coronary heart disease; CRP, C-reactive protein; CVD, cardiovascular disease; ECG, electrocardiogram; FPG, fasting plasma glucose; FRS, Framingham risk score; IFG, impaired fasting glucose; IGT, impaired glucose tolerance; MetS, metabolic syndrome; MI, myocardial infarction; NCEP, National Cholesterol Education Program; NGT, normal glucose tolerance; OGTT, oral glucose tolerance test
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REFERENCES |
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