Abstract
In nondiabetic patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), acute hyperglycemia is associated with high-risk of cardiovascular (CV) mortality but the prognostic value of glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA 1c ) remains uncertain. In a large observational study, we aimed to identify the prognostic values of admission HbA1c and plasma glucose for acute MI in non-diabetic patients regarding in-hospital and one-year CV mortality. From the RICO survey database all the consecutive non-diabetic patients with AMI ( N = 6884) from January 2001 to June 2016 were included. Cut off levels (high/low) were determined by ROC curve analysis for the prediction of CV one-year death (HbA 1c : 5.9% and glucose: 156 mg/dL) to set up 4 groups: low HbA 1c /low glucose ( N = 3849), low HbA 1c /high glucose ( N = 734), high HbA 1c /low glucose ( N = 1802) and high HbA 1c /high glucose ( N = 499). Elevation of glucose or HbA1c was associated with elevated rate of hospital mortality, when compared to all other groups ( Fig. 1 ). By multivariate logistic regression analysis, only high glucose remains a prognostic factor of hospital death (OR(95%CI): 1.59 (1.16–2.17)). In survivors at discharge, group with elevated levels of both plasma glucose and HbA 1c had a higher rate of one-year CV mortality compared to all other groups ( P < 0.001). High HbA 1c was an independent predictive factor of one-year CV mortality, beyond high glucose (OR(95%CI): 1.75(1.35–2.27) and 1.98(1.49–2.61), respectively) and covariates ( Fig. 1 ). In our large population-based study in nondiabetic patients with AMI, high levels of admission HbA 1c and/or plasma glucose give different prognostic information and were associated with increased risk of mortality at short or long-term. Early mortality risk was mainly driven by acute hyperglycemia and one-year mortality by HbA 1c , independently of plasma glucose. Our findings may help identifying high-risk patients to target for aggressive secondary prevention after AMI.
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