Is there a glycemic threshold for mortality risk?
- PMID: 10332668
- DOI: 10.2337/diacare.22.5.696
Is there a glycemic threshold for mortality risk?
Abstract
Objective: To determine whether there are thresholds for fasting and for 2-h glucose above which the risk of death from all causes and from coronary heart disease (CHD) increases.
Research design and methods: We studied 23-year mortality data from the Paris Prospective Study of the 7,018 men, aged 44-55 years, who were not known as diabetic at the baseline examination. The effect of glucose concentrations on mortality was studied using the observed relative risks and an age-adjusted Cox proportional hazards model.
Results: For all causes of death, there were J-shaped relationships with both fasting and 2-h glucose concentrations, and the lowest observed death rates were in the intervals centered on 5.5 mmol/l for fasting glucose and 5.0 mmol/l for 2-h glucose. The death rates for CHD were low in this population: for fasting glucose, the hazards ratio was best modeled by a positive linear relationship; for 2-h glucose, it was modeled by a J-shaped curve and the lowest observed death rate was in the interval centered on 6.0 mmol/l.
Conclusions: In the Paris Prospective Study, there were no clear thresholds for fasting or 2-h glucose concentrations above which mortality sharply increased; in the upper levels of the glucose distributions, the risk of death progressively increased with increasing fasting and 2-h glucose concentrations.
Comment in
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Is glucose a continuous risk factor for cardiovascular mortality?Diabetes Care. 1999 May;22(5):659-60. doi: 10.2337/diacare.22.5.659. Diabetes Care. 1999. PMID: 10332661 Review. No abstract available.
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Impaired fasting glucose is not a risk factor for cardiovascular mortality.Diabetes Care. 1999 Dec;22(12):2104. doi: 10.2337/diacare.22.12.2104b. Diabetes Care. 1999. PMID: 10587865 No abstract available.
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