Article Type
Changed
Tue, 05/03/2022 - 15:56
Display Headline
Weight Gain Following Diabetes Diagnosis Boosts Mortality

BERLIN – Adults who gained weight during the first year following their initial diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death and for all-cause death, in an analysis of nearly 8,500 patients in Swedish primary care practices.

"Weight gain in patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes may be more hazardous than previously recognized," Dr. Johan Bodegard and his associates reported in a poster at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Steps should be taken to limit weight gain in this patient group, said Dr. Bodegard, a researcher with AstraZeneca in Södertälje, Sweden, and his associates.

Courtesy Bill Branson/National Cancer Institute
An analysis of nearly 9,000 patients showed that adults who gained weight within a year of their type 2 diabetes diagnosis had a greater risk of death.

The analysis showed that among 1,238 patients who gained at least one body mass index unit (1 kg/m2) during the first year following incident diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a cardiovascular mortality rate 63% above that of 4,523 patients whose BMI didn’t change, and they had an all-cause mortality 34% above the unchanged group, both statistically significant differences. The analysis was adjusted for baseline differences in age, sex, BMI, prior angina, education, marital status, and glucose-lowering drugs.

The researchers examined records from 8,486 people who were patients in 84 primary-care centers in Sweden during 1999-2008. Patients included in the analysis had newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes who had their BMI measured at the time of initial diagnosis and also 1 year later, and also had no newly diagnosed cardiovascular disease or cancer during the first year following their diabetes diagnosis.

During that first year, 14% of the patients gained at least 1 kg/m2, 32% lost at least 1 kg/m2, and 53% had no change (percentages total 99% because of rounding). At baseline, the patients’ average age was 58 years, slightly more than half were men, and average BMI was 31 kg/m2. About a third of the patients received at least one antidiabetes drug. During a median follow-up of 4.6 years, 197 patients died from cardiovascular disease and 423 patients died overall.

The patients who added at least 1 kg/m2 during the first year of follow-up remained at an elevated BMI throughout the study. The weight gainers also had higher levels of hemoglobin A1c and higher rates of treatment with insulin and sulfonylurea drugs during follow-up, compared with the patients who didn’t change or those who lost weight. But all three subgroups showed similar patterns for blood pressure and cholesterol levels throughout follow-up.

The study was sponsored by AstraZeneca. Dr. Bodegard is an employee of AstraZeneca.

Meeting/Event
Author and Disclosure Information

Publications
Topics
Legacy Keywords
Adults,gained weight, first year, following initial diagnosis, type 2 diabetes, increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death, all-cause death, Swedish primary care practices, Dr. Johan Bodegard, European Association for the Study of Diabetes,
Sections
Author and Disclosure Information

Author and Disclosure Information

Meeting/Event
Meeting/Event

BERLIN – Adults who gained weight during the first year following their initial diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death and for all-cause death, in an analysis of nearly 8,500 patients in Swedish primary care practices.

"Weight gain in patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes may be more hazardous than previously recognized," Dr. Johan Bodegard and his associates reported in a poster at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Steps should be taken to limit weight gain in this patient group, said Dr. Bodegard, a researcher with AstraZeneca in Södertälje, Sweden, and his associates.

Courtesy Bill Branson/National Cancer Institute
An analysis of nearly 9,000 patients showed that adults who gained weight within a year of their type 2 diabetes diagnosis had a greater risk of death.

The analysis showed that among 1,238 patients who gained at least one body mass index unit (1 kg/m2) during the first year following incident diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a cardiovascular mortality rate 63% above that of 4,523 patients whose BMI didn’t change, and they had an all-cause mortality 34% above the unchanged group, both statistically significant differences. The analysis was adjusted for baseline differences in age, sex, BMI, prior angina, education, marital status, and glucose-lowering drugs.

The researchers examined records from 8,486 people who were patients in 84 primary-care centers in Sweden during 1999-2008. Patients included in the analysis had newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes who had their BMI measured at the time of initial diagnosis and also 1 year later, and also had no newly diagnosed cardiovascular disease or cancer during the first year following their diabetes diagnosis.

During that first year, 14% of the patients gained at least 1 kg/m2, 32% lost at least 1 kg/m2, and 53% had no change (percentages total 99% because of rounding). At baseline, the patients’ average age was 58 years, slightly more than half were men, and average BMI was 31 kg/m2. About a third of the patients received at least one antidiabetes drug. During a median follow-up of 4.6 years, 197 patients died from cardiovascular disease and 423 patients died overall.

The patients who added at least 1 kg/m2 during the first year of follow-up remained at an elevated BMI throughout the study. The weight gainers also had higher levels of hemoglobin A1c and higher rates of treatment with insulin and sulfonylurea drugs during follow-up, compared with the patients who didn’t change or those who lost weight. But all three subgroups showed similar patterns for blood pressure and cholesterol levels throughout follow-up.

The study was sponsored by AstraZeneca. Dr. Bodegard is an employee of AstraZeneca.

BERLIN – Adults who gained weight during the first year following their initial diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a significantly increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death and for all-cause death, in an analysis of nearly 8,500 patients in Swedish primary care practices.

"Weight gain in patients with newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes may be more hazardous than previously recognized," Dr. Johan Bodegard and his associates reported in a poster at the annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes. Steps should be taken to limit weight gain in this patient group, said Dr. Bodegard, a researcher with AstraZeneca in Södertälje, Sweden, and his associates.

Courtesy Bill Branson/National Cancer Institute
An analysis of nearly 9,000 patients showed that adults who gained weight within a year of their type 2 diabetes diagnosis had a greater risk of death.

The analysis showed that among 1,238 patients who gained at least one body mass index unit (1 kg/m2) during the first year following incident diagnosis with type 2 diabetes had a cardiovascular mortality rate 63% above that of 4,523 patients whose BMI didn’t change, and they had an all-cause mortality 34% above the unchanged group, both statistically significant differences. The analysis was adjusted for baseline differences in age, sex, BMI, prior angina, education, marital status, and glucose-lowering drugs.

The researchers examined records from 8,486 people who were patients in 84 primary-care centers in Sweden during 1999-2008. Patients included in the analysis had newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes who had their BMI measured at the time of initial diagnosis and also 1 year later, and also had no newly diagnosed cardiovascular disease or cancer during the first year following their diabetes diagnosis.

During that first year, 14% of the patients gained at least 1 kg/m2, 32% lost at least 1 kg/m2, and 53% had no change (percentages total 99% because of rounding). At baseline, the patients’ average age was 58 years, slightly more than half were men, and average BMI was 31 kg/m2. About a third of the patients received at least one antidiabetes drug. During a median follow-up of 4.6 years, 197 patients died from cardiovascular disease and 423 patients died overall.

The patients who added at least 1 kg/m2 during the first year of follow-up remained at an elevated BMI throughout the study. The weight gainers also had higher levels of hemoglobin A1c and higher rates of treatment with insulin and sulfonylurea drugs during follow-up, compared with the patients who didn’t change or those who lost weight. But all three subgroups showed similar patterns for blood pressure and cholesterol levels throughout follow-up.

The study was sponsored by AstraZeneca. Dr. Bodegard is an employee of AstraZeneca.

Publications
Publications
Topics
Article Type
Display Headline
Weight Gain Following Diabetes Diagnosis Boosts Mortality
Display Headline
Weight Gain Following Diabetes Diagnosis Boosts Mortality
Legacy Keywords
Adults,gained weight, first year, following initial diagnosis, type 2 diabetes, increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death, all-cause death, Swedish primary care practices, Dr. Johan Bodegard, European Association for the Study of Diabetes,
Legacy Keywords
Adults,gained weight, first year, following initial diagnosis, type 2 diabetes, increased risk for cardiovascular-disease death, all-cause death, Swedish primary care practices, Dr. Johan Bodegard, European Association for the Study of Diabetes,
Sections
Article Source

AT THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF DIABETES

PURLs Copyright

Inside the Article

Vitals

Major Finding:. Gaining at least 1 kg/m2 during the year after diagnosis of type 2 diabetes linked with 63% higher cardiovascular mortality compared with no weight change.

Data Source: A review of 8,486 people from 84 primary-care practices in Sweden during 1999-2008.

Disclosures: The study was sponsored by AstraZeneca. Dr. Bodegard said that he is an employee of AstraZeneca.