Diabetes and modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular disease: the prospective Million Women Study
- 18 November 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in European Journal of Epidemiology
- Vol. 23 (12) , 793-799
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-008-9298-3
Abstract
To compare the effect of potentially modifiable lifestyle factors on the incidence of vascular disease in women with and without diabetes. In 1996–2001 over one million middle-aged women in the UK joined a prospective study, providing medical history, lifestyle and socio-demographic information. All participants were followed for hospital admissions and deaths using electronic record-linkage. Adjusted relative risks (RRs) and incidence rates were calculated to compare the incidence of coronary heart disease and stroke in women with and without diabetes and by lifestyle factors. At recruitment 25,915 women (2.1% of 1,242,338) reported current treatment for diabetes. During a mean follow-up of 6.1 years per woman, 21,928 had a first hospital admission or death from coronary heart disease (RR for women with versus without diabetes = 3.30, 95% CI 3.14–3.47) and 7,087 had a first stroke (RR = 2.47, 95% CI 2.24–2.74). Adjusted incidence rates of these conditions in women with diabetes increased with duration of diabetes, obesity, inactivity and smoking. The 5-year adjusted incidence rates for cardiovascular disease were 4.6 (95% CI 4.4–4.9) per 100 women aged 50–69 in non-smokers with diabetes, 5.9 (95% CI 4.6–7.6) in smokers with diabetes not using insulin and 11.0 (95% CI 8.3–14.7) in smokers with diabetes using insulin. Non-smoking women with diabetes who were not overweight or inactive still had threefold increased rate for coronary disease or stroke compared with women without diabetes. Of the modifiable factors examined in middle aged women with diabetes, smoking causes the greatest increase in cardiovascular disease, especially in those with insulin treated diabetes.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cancer incidence and mortality in relation to body mass index in the Million Women Study: cohort studyBMJ, 2007
- Prospective Study of Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes and Risk of Stroke SubtypesDiabetes Care, 2007
- Intensive Diabetes Treatment and Cardiovascular Disease in Patients with Type 1 DiabetesNew England Journal of Medicine, 2005
- Effect of potentially modifiable risk factors associated with myocardial infarction in 52 countries (the INTERHEART study): case-control studyThe Lancet, 2004
- The Effects of Diabetes on the Risks of Major Cardiovascular Diseases and Death in the Asia-Pacific RegionDiabetes Care, 2003
- Agreement between general practice prescription data and self-reported use of hormone replacement therapy and treatment for various illnessesJournal of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, 2001
- Intensive blood-glucose control with sulphonylureas or insulin compared with conventional treatment and risk of complications in patients with type 2 diabetes (UKPDS 33)The Lancet, 1998
- Computerised record linkage: Compared with traditional patient follow-up methods in clinical trials and illustrated in a prospective epidemiological studyJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1995
- Floating absolute risk: An alternative to relative risk in survival and case‐control analysis avoiding an arbitrary reference groupStatistics in Medicine, 1991
- Diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The Framingham studyJAMA, 1979