Title: Lipid disorders in diabetes
1Lipid disorders in diabetes
- Dr. S.Martini
- MGSD, Padova, February 13, 2004
2Lipid Metabolism
3Lipoprotein Subclasses
4LIPID M ETABOLISM IN DIABETES
Lancet 350, SI20, 1997
5Dyslipidemia in Diabetes
Decreased
Increased
- Triglycerides
- VLDL
- LDL and small dense LDL
- Apo B
6LIPID DISORDERS IN DIABETES
7Dyslipidemias in Adults with DiabetesFramingham
Heart Study
MEN
WOMEN
DM
DM
Normal
Normal
Increased cholesterol Increased LDL Decreased
HDL Increased triglycerides
14 11 12 9
13 9 21 19
21 16 10 8
24 15 25 17
Garg A et al. Diabetes Care 199013153-169.
8Atherogenic Lipoprotein Profile
Small, dense LDL
TG
3 to 6 Increased CAD Risk
Metabolic Syndrome FCHL Type 2 Diabetes
HDL-C
(Austin et al. Circulation 1990)
9LDL Atherogenicity
LDL Atherogenicity
LDL particle number
High
Risk of Premature CAD
Low
Hepatic Lipase
10LDL Subclass Phenotypes in Diabetes Mellitus
LDL Subclass
Int
B
n
A
Men Diabetic Nondiabetic Women
Diabetic Nondiabetic
2987 54543
2847 3485
2129 309
5124 366
Percent
Feingold KR et al. Arterioscler Thromb 1992
121496-1502.
Selby JV et al. Circulation 1993 88381-387.
11Diabetes and Atherosclerosis LDL Modifications
Small dense LDL
Normal LDL
Oxidized LDL
Glycated LDL
Monocytes -Macrophages
Foam Cells
12Small Dense LDL and CHD Potential Atherogenic
Mechanisms
- Increased susceptibility to oxidation
- Increased vascular permeability
- Conformational changes in apo B
- Decreased affinity for LDL receptor
- Association with insulin resistance syndrome
- Association with high TG and low HDL
Austin MA et al. Curr Opin Lipidol 19967167-171.
13Small dense LDL and Atherosclerotic Plaque
Vessel Lumen
Monocyte
Small-dense LDL
AdhesionMolecules
Endothelium
MCP-1
LDL
Intima
?ox-LDL
Cytokines
Growth FactorsMetalloproteinases
Cell ProliferationMatrix Degradation
Macrophage
Foam Cell
Unstable plaque
Ross R. N Engl J Med 1999340115-126.
14HDL Antiatherogenic Lipoprotein
Vessel Lumen
Monocyte
LDL
Endothelium
LDL
Modified LDL
Foam Cell
Macrophage
Intima
Miyazaki A et al. Biochim Biophys Acta
1992112673-80.
15Plasma Insulin and Triglycerides predict Ischemic
Heart Disease Quebec Cardiovascular Study
6.7
5.4
Plt0.001
P0.002
p0.001
Triglycerides
p0.005
Odds Ratio
5.3
1.5
4.6
gt150 mg/dl
1.0
lt150 mg/dl
lt12
12-15
gt15
F-Insulin (?U/ml)
Despres JP et al. N Engl J Med 1996334952-957.
16Plasma Insulin and Apolipoprotein B predict
Ischemic Heart Disease Quebec Cardiovascular
Study
11.0
9.7
plt0.001
Plt0.001
Odds Ratio
Apolipoprotein B
1.5
3.2
3.0
gt119 mg/dl
p0.04
p0.04
1.0
lt119 mg/dl
lt12
12-15
gt15
F-Insulin (?U/ml)
Despres JP et al. N Engl J Med 1996334952-957.
17LDL particle size and Apolipoprotein B predict
Ischemic Heart Disease Quebec Cardiovascular
Study
6.2
(plt0.001)
2.0
Apo B
gt120 mg/dl
1.0
1.0
lt120 mg/dl
gt25.64
lt25.64
LDL Peak Particle Diameter (nm)
Lamarche B et al. Circulation 19979569-75.
18Frequency of different Forms of Dyslipidemia in
men with Coronary Artery Disease
Frequency ()
ALP ? TG ? HDL-C
Small, dense LDL
(Superko, Circulation, 1996)
19Mean Plasma Lipids at Diagnosis of Type 2
Diabetes - UKPDS
MEN
WOMEN
Type 2
Type 2
Control
Control
2139 213 139 39 159
52 205 132 43 103
1574 224 151 43 159
143 217 135 55 95
Number of Pts TC (mg/dl) LDL-C (mg/dl) HDL-C
(mg/dl) TG (mg/dl)
plt0.001, plt0.02 comparing type 2 vs.
control
UKPDS Group. Diabetes Care 1997201683-1687.
20Stepwise Selection of Risk Factors in 2693 White
Patients with Type 2 Diabetes with Dependent
Variable as Time to First Event UKPDS
Coronary Artery Disease (n280)
Position in Model First Second Third Fourth Fifth
Variable LDL Cholesterol HDL
Cholesterol Hemoglobin A1c Systolic Blood
Pressure Smoking
p Value lt0.0001 0.0001 0.0022 0.0065 0.056
Adjusted for age and sex. Turner RC et al. BMJ
1998316823-828.
21(No Transcript)
22CVD PREDICTORS IN TYPE 2 DIABETES THE STRONG
HEART STUDY
Diabetes Care 26, 16, 2003
23Insulin Resistance and Hyperinsulinemia
Clinical Clues
- Abdominal obesity
- ? TG ? HDL-C
- Glucose intolerance
- Hypertension
- Atherosclerosis
24The metabolic syndrome (ATPIII)
Presence of ?3 of the following risk factors
Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and
Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults.
JAMA 20012852486-2497.
25Trials of CHD prevention with Statins in
Diabetics subgroup Analysis
Downs JR et al. JAMA 19982791615-1622. HPS
Investigators. Lancet 2002 Goldberg RB et al.
Circulation 1998982513-2519. Pyorala K et al.
Diabetes Care 199720614-620. Haffner SM et
al. Arch Intern Med 19991592661-2667. LIPID
Study Group. N Engl J Med 19983391349-1357.
26Trials of CHD prevention with Statins in
Diabetics subgroup Analysis
Downs JR et al. JAMA 19982791615-1622. HPS
Investigators. Lancet 2002. Goldberg RB et al.
Circulation 1998982513-2519. Pyorala K et al.
Diabetes Care 199720614-620. LIPID Study
Group. N Engl J Med 19983391349-1357. Haffner
SM et al. Arch Intern Med 19991592661-2667.
27Major Coronary Events in 4S Patients with or
without Diabetes by History (n202)
1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0
Proportion without Major CHD Event
Diabetes by Hx, simvastatinDiabetes by Hx,
placebo No diabetes by Hx, simvastatinNo
diabetes by Hx, placebo
P0.002
P0.0001
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Years Since Randomization
Pyörälä et al. Diabetes Care 199720614-620.
28EXPANDED 4S DIABETES ANALYSISMajor coronary
events
Haffner et al, Diabetes 199847 (Suppl 1)A54.
294S Extended Diabetic Subgroup Analysis
Diabetes (n483 251 on Simvastatin) Fasting
Glucose gt126 mg/dl
0.72
CHD mortality (P0.26) Total mortality
(P0.34) Revascularizations (P0.005) Major
coronary events (P0.001)
0.79
0.52
0.58
0.8
0.0
1.4
0.6
1.0
1.2
0.2
0.4
Relative Risk
Adapted from Haffner SM et al. Arch Intern Med
19991592661-2667
304S Extended Diabetic Subgroup
AnalysisImpaired Fasting Glucose (n678 343 on
Simvastatin) Fasting Glucose 110-125 mg/dl
0.45
CHD mortality (P0.007) Total mortality
(P0.02) Revascularizations (P0.01) Major
coronary events (P0.003)
0.57
0.57
0.62
0.4
0.0
1.4
0.6
1.0
1.2
0.8
0.2
Relative Risk
Adapted from Haffner SM et al. Arch Intern Med
19991592661-2667
31Heart Protection Study Vascular Events by
Baseline Disease
Risk ratio and 95 CI
Statin better
Statin worse
? 24 2.6 (2P lt0.00001)
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
Collins R. Lancet 2002
32HEART PROTECTION STUDY
Lancet 361, 2005, 2003
33CARE Major Coronary Events in Diabetic
Subgroups
Diabetes by History
No Diabetes by History
45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0
45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0
Relative risk 0.75P0.05
Relative risk 0.77Plt0.001
Placebo
Placebo
Percent with Event
Percent with Event
Pravastatin
Pravastatin
Follow-up Time (years)
Follow-up Time (years)
Goldberg RB et al. Circulation 1998982513-2519.
34Coronary heart disease in patients with low
LDL-cholesterol benefit of pravastatin in
diabetics and enhanced role for HDL-cholesterol
and triglycerides as risk factors Circulation
2002 Mar 26105(12)1424-8
- Combined analysis CARE and LIPID studies(PPP
study) - 13173 patients
- 2607 with LDL-C lt 125 mg/dl
- 270 diabetics with LDL-C lt 125 mg/dl
35CHD Prevention Trials with Fibrates in Diabetic
Subjects Subgroup Analyses
Koskinen P et al. Diabetes Care 199215820-825.
Rubins HB et al. N Engl J Med 1999341410-418.
DAIS Investigators. Lancet 2001357905-910.
36Primary CHD Prevention in Type 2 Diabetic
Patients The Helsinki Heart Study
P0.19
10.5
Plt0.02
7.4
5-Year Incidence of CHD ()
3.4
3.3
Type 2(n135)
Others(n3946)
Type 2 on Placebo(n76)
Type 2 onGemfibrozil(n59)
Myocardial infarction or cardiac death Adapted
from Koskinen P et al. Diabetes Care
199215820-825.
37VA-HIT Incidence of Death from CHD and Nonfatal
MI
Placebo
Gemfibrozil
Cumulative Incidence ()
Year
Rubins HB et al. N Engl J Med 1999341410-418.
38VA-HIT SUB-GROUP ANALYSIS
Arch Intern Med 162, 2597, 2002
39CHD Risk Equivalent
- Patients with established CHD have a risk for
recurrent MI and CHD death that exceeds 20 per
10 years. Clinically evident noncoronary
atherosclerosis, as well as type 2 diabetes
mellitus, impose an approximately equal risk for
developing CHD in patients without clinical CHD. - CHD risk equivalents
- Multiple risk factors (gt20 10-year CHD risk)
- Type 2 diabetes mellitus
- Peripheral arterial disease
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Carotid artery disease
Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and
Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults.
JAMA 20012852486-2497.
40Diabetes as a CHD Risk Equivalent
- Implies that enhanced benefit will be achieved
from aggressive LDL-lowering therapy - Post-hoc analysis of all statin trials showed a
trend for benefit of LDL lowering in persons with
diabetes
41LDL Cholesterol Goals and Cutpoints (mg/dl) for
Therapy in Different Risk Categories
42Non-HDL-C Goals in Patients with TG ?200 mg/dL
Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and
Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults.
JAMA 20012852486-2497.
43ATP III Management of Diabetic Dyslipidemia
- Primary target of therapy LDL-C
- Diabetes CHD risk equivalent
- Therefore, goal for persons with diabetes lt100
mg/dL - Therapeutic options
- LDL-C 100129 mg/dL increase intensity of TLC
add drug to modify atherogenic dyslipidemia
(fibrate or nicotinic acid) intensify statin
therapy - LDL-C ?130 mg/dL simultaneously initiate TLC
and LDL-Clowering drugs - After LDL-C goal is met, if TG ?200 mg/dL
nonHDL-C (lt130 mg/dl) becomes secondary target
ATP III. JAMA 20012852486-2497.
44Clinical Management of Metabolic Syndrome
- Management of underlying causes
- Weight control enhances LDL lowering and
reduces all risk factors - Physical activity reduces VLDL and LDL and
increases HDL - Treat lipid and nonlipid risk factors
- Hypertension
- Aspirin in CHD patients
- Elevated triglycerides
- Low HDL
Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and
Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults.
JAMA 20012852486-2497.
45Treatment Strategies for Diabetic Dyslipidemia
- Primary Strategy
- - Lower LDL cholesterol
- Secondary Strategy
- - Raise HDL cholesterol
- - Lower triglycerides
- Other Approaches
- - Non-HDL cholesterol
- - ApoB
- - Remnants
American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Care.
200023(suppl 1)S57-S60 Chait A, Brunzell JD.
Diabetes Mellitus. A Fundamental and Clinical
Text. Philadelphia Lippincott Raven,
1996772-779 European Diabetes Policy Group
1999. Diabet Med. 199916716-730.
46Order of Priorities for Treatment of Diabetic
Dyslipidemia in Adults
- LDL cholesterol lowering
- - First choice HMG CoA reductase inhibitor
(statin) - - Second choice Bile acid binding resin or
fenofibrate - HDL cholesterol raising
- - Behavioral interventions such as weight
loss, increased physical activity and smoking
cessation - - Glycemic control
- - Difficult except with nicotinic acid,
which is relatively contraindicated, or fibrates - Triglyceride lowering
- - Glycemic control first priority
- - Fibric acid derivatives (gemfibrozil,
fenofibrate) - - Statins are moderately effective at high
dose in hypertriglyceridemic subjects who also
have high LDL cholesterol - Decision for treatment of high LDL before
elevated triglyceride is based on clinical trial
data indicating safety as well as efficacy of the
available agents.
American Diabetes Association. Diabetes Care
200023(suppl 1)S57-S60.
47Diabetes Care 26, suppl 1, 2003
48Diabetes Care 26, suppl 1, 2003
49European Task Force 2003 definition of high risk
- Subjects with established cardiovascular disease
(CHD, PAD, CVD) - Asymptomatic subjects who have
a) multiple risk
factors resulting in a 10 year risk of fatal
cardiovascular events ? 5 (now or extrapolated
to age 60)
b) markedly raised levels
of single risk factors CT ? 320 , LDL-C ? 240,
blood pressure ?180/110
c) diabetes type II and
diabetes type I with microalbuminuria
50European Task Force 2003 goals of treatment in
type 2 diabetes
- HbA1c lt 6.1
- Fasting/pre-prandial venous plasma glucose lt 110
mg/dl - Self-monitored blood glucose Fasting/pre-prandia
l 70-90 mg/dl post-prandial 70-135 mg/dl - blood pressure lt 130/80
- total cholesterol lt 175 mg/dl
- LDL cholesterol lt 100 mg/dl