KISSIMMEE, FLA. — Stroke risk is highest in the first years after receiving a diagnosis of type 2 diabetes, with a 17-fold higher risk for patients aged 18–34 years old, researchers reported at the 31st International Stroke Conference.
The findings underscore the importance of early and aggressive management of cardiovascular risk factors in diabetic patients, especially the triumvirate of obesity, hypertension, and high triglyceride levels that constitute metabolic syndrome, said Dr. Thomas J. Jeerakathil of the University of Alberta, Edmonton.
“This should be a real wake-up call that cardiovascular risk factors in diabetics need to be tackled from the very beginning. There is a real up-front risk,” he said at the meeting sponsored by the American Stroke Association.
Both Dr. Jeerakathil and Dr. Brett M. Kissela of the University of Cincinnati undertook population-based epidemiologic studies of stroke in people with diabetes.
Dr. Jeerakathil's study included 12,272 patients in Saskatchewan who received a new prescription for oral hypoglycemic medication in 1991–1996, indicating newly diagnosed diabetes. The patients' average age was 64 years, and the average follow-up was 5 years.
During that time, 9% experienced a hospital admission for stroke and 22% of the entire cohort died. The rate of stroke was 1,025/100,000 person-years—double the rate seen in the general population (499/100,000 person-years).
Dr. Kissela's study also concluded that strokes were occurring earlier in diabetic patients than in nondiabetic patients.
He used a large Ohio medical database to compare the incidence of ischemic stroke in those with diabetes to those without diabetes. Of 2,432 patients who had strokes in 1999, 33% had a history of diabetes. Patients with diabetes and stroke were younger (70 vs. 73 years), likelier to be black (25% vs. 15%), and likelier to have a history of hypertension (82% vs. 66%), high cholesterol levels (31% vs. 18%), and myocardial infarction (19% vs. 12%).
In both whites and blacks with diabetes, the increased risk of stroke was highest in those under age 55. White diabetics aged 18–34 had a 17-fold increase over the general population. The risk ratio was 8 in those aged 35–44, and 6 in those aged 45–54. For blacks, the increased risk was again highest for the youngest patients (8.5-fold increase). For those aged 35–44, the risk ratio was 7.5, and it was doubled for those aged 45–54.
The increased risk of stroke in young diabetics, coupled with the increased incidence of metabolic syndrome signs, should be a red flag for physicians who have focused on glycemic control and the prevention of microvascular disease, said Dr. Kissela.
“Glycemic control is important, but it's not enough. These patients are at great risk and need to be aggressively managed with weight control, blood pressure control, and lipid control.”
Previous studies have shown that diabetes patients benefit even more than the general population from hypertension control, Dr. Jeerakathil added. “In the average population, if you lower blood pressure by 10 points, you lower the risk of stroke by 40%. But in diabetics, the same 10 points will lower the risk of stroke by 60%. They get more bang for the buck,” he said.