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Insulin Resistance and Risk of Congestive Heart Failure
Erik Ingelsson, MD; Johan Sundström, MD, PhD; Johan
Ärnlöv, MD, PhD; Björn Zethelius, MD, PhD; Lars Lind, MD,
PhD
JAMA. 2005;294:334-341.
Context Diabetes and obesity are established
risk factors for congestive heart failure (CHF) and are both associated
with insulin resistance.
Objective To explore if insulin
resistance may predict CHF and may provide the link between obesity and
CHF.
Design, Setting, and Participants The Uppsala
Longitudinal Study of Adult Men, a prospective, community-based, observational
cohort in Uppsala, Sweden. We investigated 1187 elderly (70 years) men
free from CHF and valvular disease at baseline between 1990 and 1995,
with follow-up until the end of 2002. Variables reflecting insulin
sensitivity (including euglycemic insulin clamp
glucose disposal rate) and obesity were analyzed together with established
risk factors (prior myocardial infarction, hypertension, diabetes, electrocardiographic
left ventricular hypertrophy, smoking, and serum cholesterol level) as
predictors of subsequent incidence of CHF, using Cox proportional hazards
analyses.
Main Outcome Measure First hospitalization for
heart failure.
Results One hundred four men developed CHF during
a median follow-up of 8.9 (range, 0.01-11.4) years. In multivariable Cox
proportional hazards models adjusted for established risk factors for
CHF, increased risk of CHF was associated with a 1-SD increase in the
2-hour glucose value of an oral glucose tolerance test (hazard ratio [HR],
1.44; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.08-1.93), fasting serum pro
insulin level (HR, 1.29; 95% CI, 1.02-1.64), body mass index
(HR, 1.35; 95% CI, 1.11-1.65), and waist circumference (HR, 1.36; 95%
CI, 1.10-1.69), whereas a 1-SD increase in clamp glucose disposal rate
decreased the risk (HR, 0.66; 95% CI, 0.51-0.86). When adding clamp glucose
disposal rate to these models as a covariate, the obesity variables were
no longer significant predictors of subsequent CHF.
Conclusions Insulin resistance
predicted CHF incidence independently of established risk factors including
diabetes in our large community-based sample of elderly men. The previously
described association between obesity and subsequent CHF may be mediated
largely by insulin resistance.
Author Affiliations: Departments of Public Health and Caring
Sciences (Drs Ingelsson, Sundström, Ärnlöv, and Zethelius)
and Medical Sciences (Dr Lind), Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden; and
Astra Zeneca R&D, Mölndal, Sweden (Dr Lind).
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