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Impact of diabetes on remodelling, microvascular function and exercise capacity in aortic stenosis

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posted on 2023-09-19, 12:37 authored by Abhishek Dattani, Emer M Brady, Aseel Alfuhied, Gaurav S Gulsin, Christopher D Steadman, Jian L Yeo, Saadia Aslam, Marko Banovic, Michael Jerosch-Herold, Hui Xue, Peter Kellman, Philippe Costet, Mary Ellen Cvijic, Lei Zhao, Christina Ebert, Laura Liu, Kushan Gunawardhana, David Gordon, Ching-Pin Chang, J Ranjit Arnold, Thomas Yates, Damian Kelly, Kai Hogrefe, Dana Dawson, John Greenwood, Leong L Ng, Anvesha Singh, Gerry P McCann

Objective To characterise cardiac remodelling, exercise capacity and fibroinflammatory biomarkers in patients with aortic stenosis (AS) with and without diabetes, and assess the impact of diabetes on outcomes.


Methods Patients with moderate or severe AS with and without diabetes underwent echocardiography, stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), cardiopulmonary exercise testing and plasma biomarker analysis. Primary endpoint for survival analysis was a composite of cardiovascular mortality, myocardial infarction, hospitalisation with heart failure, syncope or arrhythmia. Secondary endpoint was all-cause death.


Results Diabetes (n=56) and non-diabetes groups (n=198) were well matched for age, sex, ethnicity, blood pressure and severity of AS. The diabetes group had higher body mass index, lower estimated glomerular filtration rate and higher rates of hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and symptoms of AS. Biventricular volumes and systolic function were similar, but the diabetes group had higher extracellular volume fraction (25.9%±3.1% vs 24.8%±2.4%, p=0.020), lower myocardial perfusion reserve (2.02±0.75 vs 2.34±0.68, p=0.046) and lower percentage predicted peak oxygen consumption (68%±21% vs 77%±17%, p=0.002) compared with the non-diabetes group. Higher levels of renin (log10renin: 3.27±0.59 vs 2.82±0.69 pg/mL, p<0.001) were found in diabetes. Multivariable Cox regression analysis showed diabetes was not associated with cardiovascular outcomes, but was independently associated with all-cause mortality (HR 2.04, 95% CI 1.05 to 4.00; p=0.037).


Conclusions In patients with moderate-to-severe AS, diabetes is associated with reduced exercise capacity, increased diffuse myocardial fibrosis and microvascular dysfunction, but not cardiovascular events despite a small increase in mortality.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Open heart

Volume

10

Issue

2

Pagination

e002441

Publisher

BMJ

issn

2053-3624

eissn

2053-3624

Copyright date

2023

Available date

2023-09-19

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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