Abstract

SummaryBackgroundSeveral studies have shown that diabetes confers a higher relative risk of vascular mortality among women than among men, but whether this increased relative risk in women exists across age groups and within defined levels of other risk factors is uncertain. We aimed to determine whether differences in established risk factors, such as blood pressure, BMI, smoking, and cholesterol, explain the higher relative risks of vascular mortality among women than among men.MethodsIn our meta-analysis, we obtained individual participant-level data from studies included in the Prospective Studies Collaboration and the Asia Pacific Cohort Studies Collaboration that had obtained baseline information on age, sex, diabetes, total cholesterol, blood pressure, tobacco use, height, and weight. Data on causes of death were obtained from medical death certificates. We used Cox regression models to assess the relevance of diabetes (any type) to occlusive vascular mortality (ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke, or other atherosclerotic deaths) by age, sex, and other major vascular risk factors, and to assess whether the associations of blood pressure, total cholesterol, and body-mass index (BMI) to occlusive vascular mortality are modified by diabetes.ResultsIndividual participant-level data were analysed from 980 793 adults. During 9·8 million person-years of follow-up, among participants aged between 35 and 89 years, 19 686 (25·6%) of 76 965 deaths were attributed to occlusive vascular disease. After controlling for major vascular risk factors, diabetes roughly doubled occlusive vascular mortality risk among men (death rate ratio [RR] 2·10, 95% CI 1·97–2·24) and tripled risk among women (3·00, 2·71–3·33; χ2 test for heterogeneity p<0·0001). For both sexes combined, the occlusive vascular death RRs were higher in younger individuals (aged 35–59 years: 2·60, 2·30–2·94) than in older individuals (aged 70–89 years: 2·01, 1·85–2·19; p=0·0001 for trend across age groups), and, across age groups, the death RRs were higher among women than among men. Therefore, women aged 35–59 years had the highest death RR across all age and sex groups (5·55, 4·15–7·44). However, since underlying confounder-adjusted occlusive vascular mortality rates at any age were higher in men than in women, the adjusted absolute excess occlusive vascular mortality associated with diabetes was similar for men and women. At ages 35–59 years, the excess absolute risk was 0·05% (95% CI 0·03–0·07) per year in women compared with 0·08% (0·05–0·10) per year in men; the corresponding excess at ages 70–89 years was 1·08% (0·84–1·32) per year in women and 0·91% (0·77–1·05) per year in men. Total cholesterol, blood pressure, and BMI each showed continuous log-linear associations with occlusive vascular mortality that were similar among individuals with and without diabetes across both sexes.InterpretationIndependent of other major vascular risk factors, diabetes substantially increased vascular risk in both men and women. Lifestyle changes to reduce smoking and obesity and use of cost-effective drugs that target major vascular risks (eg, statins and antihypertensive drugs) are important in both men and women with diabetes, but might not reduce the relative excess risk of occlusive vascular disease in women with diabetes, which remains unexplained.FundingUK Medical Research Council, British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, European Union BIOMED programme, and National Institute on Aging (US National Institutes of Health).

Highlights

  • Worldwide, the age-standardised prevalence of diabetes more than doubled between 1980 and 2014, with the greatest relative and absolute increases seen in low-income and middle-income countries.[1]

  • We examined whether the relevance of blood pressure, blood cholesterol, and bodymass index (BMI)—factors that might cause or be caused by diabetes—to occlusive vascular mortality risk varied with the presence or absence of diabetes

  • Of the 58 700 participants who reported no history of diabetes but who had a measurement of glucose, only 1174 (2·0%) had a glucose measurement that indicated they had undiagnosed diabetes and were counted as having diabetes in the main analyses

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Summary

Introduction

The age-standardised prevalence of diabetes more than doubled between 1980 and 2014, with the greatest relative and absolute increases seen in low-income and middle-income countries.[1]. Evidence before this study Several large prospective studies and meta-analyses of such studies—especially the extensive collaborative meta-analysis by the Emerging Risk Factors Collaboration—have shown that individuals with diabetes are predisposed to increased vascular mortality, from occlusive causes, and a higher relative risk exists among women than among men. Despite these studies, reasons for these sex differences are still unclear; they might relate to differential confounding by other established major vascular risk factors, such as blood pressure, total cholesterol, body-mass index (BMI), and smoking status. Because those with diabetes were at a much higher risk than those without diabetes, the absolute relevance of these risk factors to vascular mortality risk was much greater among those with diabetes than those without

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