Borderline ankle-brachial index is associated with increased prevalence of micro- and macrovascular complications in type 2 diabetes: A cross-sectional analysis of 12,772 patients from the Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation Program

Bryan P Yan, Yuying Zhang, Alice P S Kong, Andrea O Y Luk, Risa Ozaki, Roseanne Yeung, Peter C Y Tong, Wing Ban Chan, Chiu-Chi Tsang, Kam-Piu Lau, Yu Cheung, Troels Wolthers, Greg Lyubomirsky, Wing-Yee So, Ronald C W Ma, Francis C C Chow, Juliana C N Chan, Hong Kong JADE Study Group, Bryan P Yan, Yuying Zhang, Alice P S Kong, Andrea O Y Luk, Risa Ozaki, Roseanne Yeung, Peter C Y Tong, Wing Ban Chan, Chiu-Chi Tsang, Kam-Piu Lau, Yu Cheung, Troels Wolthers, Greg Lyubomirsky, Wing-Yee So, Ronald C W Ma, Francis C C Chow, Juliana C N Chan, Hong Kong JADE Study Group

Abstract

Borderline ankle-brachial index is increasingly recognised as a marker of cardiovascular risk. We evaluated the impact of borderline ankle-brachial index in 12,772 Chinese type 2 diabetes patients from the Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation Program between 2007 and 2012. Cardiovascular risk factors, complications and health-related quality of life were compared between patients with normal ankle-brachial index (1.0-1.4), borderline ankle-brachial index (0.90-0.99) and peripheral arterial disease (ankle-brachial index < 0.9). The prevalence of peripheral arterial disease and borderline ankle-brachial index was 4.6% and 9.6%, respectively. Borderline ankle-brachial index patients were older, more likely to be smokers and hypertensive, had longer duration of diabetes, poorer kidney function and poorer health-related quality of life than patients with normal ankle-brachial index. After adjustment for traditional cardiovascular risk factors, borderline ankle-brachial index was an independent predictor of diabetes-related micro- and macrovascular complications including retinopathy (odd ratios: 1.19 (95% confidence interval: 1.04-1.37)), macroalbuminuria (1.31 (1.10-1.56)), chronic kidney disease (1.22 (1.00-1.50)) and stroke (1.31 (1.05-1.64)). These findings suggest that patients with diabetes and borderline ankle-brachial index are at increased cardiovascular risk and may benefit from more intensive management.

Keywords: Ankle–brachial index; Chinese; Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation Program; micro- and macrovascular complications; peripheral arterial disease; type 2 diabetes.

© The Author(s) 2015.

Source: PubMed

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