Abstract

Background: While patients with diabetes (DM) have more diffuse coronary artery disease (CAD), the data on whether they experience more (or less) angina than patients without DM are conflicting. Although older studies suggested that patients with DM have less angina (due to silent ischemia), this has been contradicted by more recent work among patients after myocardial infarction. However, the prevalence of angina after PCI in patients with DM and stable CAD has not been examined. Methods: In a 10-site US PCI registry, we assessed angina in patients before elective PCI and at 1, 6, and 12 months after PCI with the Seattle Angina Questionnaire (SAQ) angina frequency (AF) score (range 0-100, higher=better). We also examined the rates of antianginal medication prescription at discharge. A multivariable, repeated measures Poisson model including demographic and clinical variables such as multivessel coronary disease was used to examine the association of diabetes with angina. Results: Among 1080 elective PCI patients (mean age 65, 74.7% male), 34.0% had DM. At baseline, 1, 6, and 12 months, patients with DM had similar angina prevalence as those without DM (Figure). In addition, when assessed as a continuous variable, SAQ AF scores were also similar at baseline and each follow-up for patients with DM vs. without DM (Figure). Patients with DM were more commonly prescribed calcium channel blockers and nitrates at discharge (DM vs. not: 27.9% vs 20.9% [p=0.01] and 32.8% vs. 25.5%, [p=0.01], respectively), while beta-blockers and ranolazine were prescribed at similar rates. In the multivariable, repeated measures model, the risk of angina remained similar at 1 and 12 months, and was slightly higher at 6 months in patients with vs. without diabetes (1 month: RR 1.10, 95% CI 0.84-1.44; 6 month: RR 1.24, 1.06-1.44; 12 months RR 1.04, 0.80-1.36). Conclusions: Patients with stable coronary artery disease and diabetes exhibit a burden of angina that is at least as high as those without diabetes, despite more aggressive antianginal prescription at discharge. These findings contradict the prevailing “conventional wisdom” which dictates that patients with diabetes experience less angina due to silent ischemia.

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