Obese subjects with diabetes had an increased hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality following an ischemic stroke compared with underweight/normal-weight subjects without diabetes.
Cohort
Yes
Does the joint presence of obesity and diabetes increase all-cause and cardiovascular-related mortality in patients following an ischemic stroke?
Subjects with a recent ischemic stroke (data from the multicenter PRoFESS trial)
Obesity and diabetes mellitus (joint exposure)
Underweight/normal-weight subjects without diabetes
All-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related mortalityhard clinical
Obesity and diabetes synergistically interact to increase the hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality in ischemic stroke survivors.
Although obesity and diabetes mellitus, or diabetes, are independently associated with mortality-related events (e.g., all-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related mortality) following an ischemic stroke, little is known about the joint effect of obesity and diabetes on mortality-related events following an ischemic stroke. The aim of this study is to evaluate the joint effect of obesity and diabetes on mortality-related events in subjects with a recent ischemic stroke. Data from the multicenter Prevention Regimen for Effectively Avoiding Second Strokes (PRoFESS) trial was analyzed for this study. The joint effect of obesity and diabetes on mortality-related events was estimated via Cox proportional hazards regression models. No difference in the hazard of all-cause mortality following an ischemic stroke was observed between obese subjects with diabetes and underweight/normal-weight subjects without diabetes. In contrast, obese subjects with diabetes had an increased hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality following an ischemic stroke compared with underweight/normal-weight subjects without diabetes. Additionally, there was evidence of an attributable proportion due to interaction as well as evidence of a highly statistically significant interaction on the multiplicative scale for cardiovascular-related mortality. In this clinical trial cohort of ischemic stroke survivors, obesity and diabetes synergistically interacted to increase the hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality.
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Bauza et al. (Thu,) conducted a cohort in Ischemic stroke. Obesity and diabetes vs. Underweight/normal-weight without diabetes was evaluated on All-cause mortality and cardiovascular-related mortality. Obese subjects with diabetes had an increased hazard of cardiovascular-related mortality following an ischemic stroke compared with underweight/normal-weight subjects without diabetes.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69be37726e48c4981c6771f2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/4812712">https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/4812712</a></p
Colleen Bauza
Johns Hopkins University
Renée H. Martin
Medical University of South Carolina
Sharon D. Yeatts
Medical University of South Carolina
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