Association of systolic blood pressure with macrovascular and microvascular complications of type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 36): prospective observational study

A I Adler, I M Stratton, H A Neil, J S Yudkin, D R Matthews, C A Cull, A D Wright, R C Turner, R R Holman, A I Adler, I M Stratton, H A Neil, J S Yudkin, D R Matthews, C A Cull, A D Wright, R C Turner, R R Holman

Abstract

Objective: To determine the relation between systolic blood pressure over time and the risk of macrovascular or microvascular complications in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Design: Prospective observational study.

Setting: 23 hospital based clinics in England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.

Participants: 4801 white, Asian Indian, and Afro-Caribbean UKPDS patients, whether randomised or not to treatment, were included in analyses of incidence; of these, 3642 were included in analyses of relative risk.

Outcome measures: Primary predefined aggregate clinical outcomes: any complications or deaths related to diabetes and all cause mortality. Secondary aggregate outcomes: myocardial infarction, stroke, lower extremity amputation (including death from peripheral vascular disease), and microvascular disease (predominantly retinal photocoagulation). Single end points: non-fatal heart failure and cataract extraction. Risk reduction associated with a 10 mm Hg decrease in updated mean systolic blood pressure adjusted for specific confounders.

Results: The incidence of clinical complications was significantly associated with systolic blood pressure, except for cataract extraction. Each 10 mm Hg decrease in updated mean systolic blood pressure was associated with reductions in risk of 12% for any complication related to diabetes (95% confidence interval 10% to 14%, P<0.0001), 15% for deaths related to diabetes (12% to 18%, P<0.0001), 11% for myocardial infarction (7% to 14%, P<0.0001), and 13% for microvascular complications (10% to 16%, P<0.0001). No threshold of risk was observed for any end point.

Conclusions: In patients with type 2 diabetes the risk of diabetic complications was strongly associated with raised blood pressure. Any reduction in blood pressure is likely to reduce the risk of complications, with the lowest risk being in those with systolic blood pressure less than 120 mm Hg.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Incidence rate (95% confidence interval) of any aggregate end point related to diabetes by category of updated mean systolic blood pressure, adjusted for age, sex, and ethnic group, expressed for white men aged 50-54 years at diagnosis and mean duration of diabetes of 10 years
Figure 2
Figure 2
Incidence rates (95% confidence interval) of myocardial infarction and microvascular end points by category of updated mean systolic blood pressure, adjusted for age, sex, and ethnic group expressed for white men aged 50-54 years at diagnosis and mean duration of diabetes of 10 years
Figure 3
Figure 3
Hazard rates (95% confidence intervals as floating absolute risks) as estimate of association between category of updated mean systolic blood pressure and any end point related to diabetes, death related to diabetes, and all cause mortality with log linear scales. Reference category (hazard ratio 1.0) is systolic blood pressure 1c, high and low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride
Figure 4
Figure 4
Hazard rates (95% confidence intervals as floating absolute risks) as estimate of association between category of updated mean systolic blood pressure and myocardial infarction, stroke, microvascular end points, cataract extraction, lower extremity amputation, or fatal peripheral vascular disease and heart failure, with log linear scales. Reference category (hazard ratio 1.0) is systolic blood pressure 1c, high and low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride

Source: PubMed

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