Suzuki Atsushi
Department School of Medicine(Tokyo Women's Medical University Hospital), School of Medicine Position Assistant Professor |
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Language | English |
Title | Haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) in Diabetic Patients with Myocardial Infarction: Is HbA1c an Independent Risk Factor and Predictor of Adverse Outcome? |
Conference | The 83rd Annual Scientific Meeting of the Japanese Circulation Society (JCS2019) |
Promoters | Japanese Circulation Society |
Conference Type | Nationwide Conferences |
Presentation Type | Speech |
Lecture Type | General |
Publisher and common publisher | ◎SUZUKI Atsushi, SHIGA Tsuyoshi, OGAWA Hiroshi, HAGIWARA Nobuhisa |
Date | 2019/03/31 |
Venue (city and name of the country) |
Yokohama, JAPAN |
Summary | *Oral Presentation (English)29 Diabetes
The mortality after myocardial infarction (MI) is higher in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM) than without DM. However, the relationship is not clear the glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) level and mortality in patients after MI. We examined the effect of HbA1c on all-cause mortality in Japanese survivors of MI using data from the HIJAMI II. Patients with DM (n=1,041) were categorized into the three HbA1c groups at baseline: HbA1c <7.0% (n=553), 7.0%≤ HbA1c <8.0% (n=198), 8.0%≤ HbA1c (n=290). During an average follow-up of 4.1±1.4 years, all-cause death, cardiovascular (CV) death and sudden cardiac death (SCD) were was 15.9%, 8.2% and 2.0%, respectively. The mean HbA1c in this study was 7.2±1.7%. By Kaplan-Meier analysis, there was not significant difference between 3 HbA1c groups in all-cause mortality, CV death and SCD (Figure). Multivariate analysis revealed that an each HbA1c level was not a significant predictor of all-cause mortality, CV death and SCD in patients with diabetes after MI. The optimal HbA1c levels remains to be elucidated in diabetic patients after MI. |