Conference Coverage

Young diabetics are at sevenfold increased risk of sudden cardiac death


 

REPORTING FROM THE AHA SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS


The second and third most common causes of death in young Danish diabetic patients were pulmonary and endocrine diseases, which occurred at rates 7.2- and 79.2-fold greater in these patients, respectively, than in controls.

All-cause mortality occurred at a rate of 234.9 deaths/100,000 person-years in young patients with diabetes versus 50.9 deaths/100,000 person-years in matched controls, for a 4.6-fold increased risk.

Autopsies showed that the most common cause of death in diabetic persons aged 36-49 years was coronary artery disease, while in those up to age 35, it was sudden arrhythmic death syndrome, a label bestowed when a medical examiner can’t find an apparent cause of death.

Session moderator Robert H. Eckle, MD, a past AHA president, cautioned against routinely attributing the deaths without apparent cause at autopsy in young people with diabetes to sudden arrhythmic death syndrome. Given that the Danish registry data don’t include data on diabetic patients’ degree of metabolic control, it seems likely that an uncertain number of those deaths were really caused by hypoglycemia, observed Dr. Eckle, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora.

Mr. Svane reported having no financial conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Svane J. 2017 AHA Sessions.

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: No short-term link found between PPIs, myocardial infarction
MDedge Internal Medicine
AHA: Heart health helps optimize breast cancer outcomes
MDedge Internal Medicine
Canagliflozin falls short for primary CV prevention in T2DM
MDedge Internal Medicine
VIDEO: Rivaroxaban plus aspirin halves ischemic strokes
MDedge Internal Medicine
STEMI success stagnating
MDedge Internal Medicine
OSA may provide cardioprotection
MDedge Internal Medicine
Viremic suppression linked to decreased MACE rate in patients with HCV-cirrhosis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Overweight and obese individuals face greater cardiovascular morbidity
MDedge Internal Medicine
Sex-triggered sudden cardiac arrest extremely rare
MDedge Internal Medicine
200 cardiovascular drugs now in development
MDedge Internal Medicine