Cardiovascular and All-Cause Mortality Over a 23-Year Period Among Chinese With Newly Diagnosed Diabetes in the Da Qing IGT and Diabetes Study.

Category Primary study
JournalDiabetes care
Year 2015
OBJECTIVE: Despite its growing prevalence in China, the extent to which diabetes leads to excess cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality and all-cause mortality is unclear. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We compared death rates and causes of death among 630 people with newly diagnosed diabetes (NDD) and 519 with normal glucose tolerance (NGT) who, in 1986, were identified as a result of screening 110,660 adults aged 25-74 years for diabetes in Da Qing, China. RESULTS: During 23 years of follow-up, 338 (56.5%) participants with NDD and 100 (20.3%) with NGT died. CVD was the predominant cause of death in those with diabetes (47.5% in men and 49.7% in women), almost half of which was due to stroke (52.3% in men and 42.3% in women). The age-standardized incidence of all-cause death was three times as high in those with NDD as in those with NGT with incidences (per 1,000 person-years) of 36.9 (95% CI 31.5-42.3) vs. 13.3 (10.2-16.5) in men (P < 0.0001) and 27.1 (22.9-31.4) vs. 9.2 (7.8-10.6) in women (P < 0.0001). The incidence of CVD deaths in men and women with NDD (17.5 [13.8-21.2] vs. 13.5 [10.5-16.5]) did not differ significantly. Significantly higher death rates attributable to renal disease and infection were also found in the NDD group. CONCLUSIONS: Diabetes is associated with a substantially increased risk of death in Chinese adults, especially from CVD, almost half of which is due to stroke.
Epistemonikos ID: 61fd1b6f92912999f5babbfdfed7f32a0ea0ae50
First added on: Apr 21, 2023