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Treatment disparities and effect on late mortality in patients with diabetes presenting with acute myocardial infarction: observations from the ACACIA registry

Joseph Hung, David B Brieger, John V Amerena, Steven G Coverdale, James M Rankin, Carolyn M Astley, Ashish Soman and Derek P Chew
Med J Aust 2009; 191 (10): 539-543. || doi: 10.5694/j.1326-5377.2009.tb03306.x
Published online: 16 November 2009

Abstract

Objectives: To compare the use of evidence-based pharmacological and invasive treatments and 12-month mortality rates between patients with and without diabetes who present with acute myocardial infarction (MI), and to explore the relationship between these treatments and late clinical outcomes.

Design and setting: Prospective, nationwide multicentre registry: the Acute Coronary Syndrome Prospective Audit (ACACIA).

Patients: Patients presenting to 24 metropolitan and 15 non-metropolitan hospitals with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) and a final discharge diagnosis of acute MI between November 2005 and July 2007.

Main outcome measure: All-cause mortality at 12 months.

Results: Nearly a quarter of 1744 patients with a final diagnosis of acute MI had a history of diabetes on presentation. Patients with diabetes were older, with a greater prevalence of comorbidities than non-diabetic patients, and were less likely to be treated at discharge with evidence-based medications (aspirin, clopidogrel, a statin and/or a β-blocker) or to receive early invasive procedures. After adjusting for baseline characteristics and therapeutic interventions, diabetes at presentation was independently associated with a higher mortality at 12 months after MI (hazard ratio, 1.79; 95% CI, 1.18–2.72; P = 0.007). Early invasive management and discharge prescription of guideline-recommended medications were associated with a significantly reduced hazard of mortality at 12 months.

Conclusion: Patients with diabetes have a higher risk than non-diabetic patients of late mortality following an acute MI, yet receive fewer guideline-recommended medications and early invasive procedures. Increased application of proven pharmacotherapies and an early invasive management strategy in patients with diabetes presenting with ACS might improve their outcomes.

Study protocol number (sanofi-aventis): PML-0051.

Patients with diabetes have higher short-term and long-term mortality and morbidity rates after acute myocardial infarction (MI) than non-diabetic patients.1-7 Proven risk-modifying treatments have shown equivalent or larger relative risk reductions in diabetic compared with non-diabetic patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS).8-10 The absolute benefit of these treatments among diabetic patients with ACS is potentially greater owing to their higher baseline risk. This underscores the importance of physician adherence to evidence-based guidelines in the treatment of patients with diabetes who present with ACS. However, data from several international registries suggest that disparities in mortality rates and treatments have persisted among diabetic compared with non-diabetic patients following acute MI, despite broad acceptance of ACS treatment guidelines.3-7

We used data from a prospective national registry of patients with ACS to compare the use of evidence-based pharmacological and invasive treatments and 12-month mortality rates between patients with and without diabetes who present with acute MI. We also explored the relationship between these treatments and 12-month clinical outcomes.

Methods

The Acute Coronary Syndrome Prospective Audit (ACACIA, sanofi-aventis study protocol number PML-0051) has been described previously.11,12 The trial was conducted between 1 November 2005 and 31 July 2007 and involved 39 hospitals across all states and territories of Australia. Hospitals were selected to be representative of rural (25%) and metropolitan (75%) centres, and of interventional (83%) and non-interventional (17%) centres.11 The trial enrolled 3402 patients with suspected ST segment elevation MI (STEMI) or high-risk and intermediate-risk non-ST segment elevation ACS.13 This analysis was limited to the 1744 patients with a final discharge diagnosis of acute MI, determined by investigators at each hospital site and confirmed by a centralised query process.11

The trial was approved by the institutional ethics committee at each site. All patients included in the trial provided informed consent with the exception of those who died before consent was sought; access to their medical records was approved by the local ethics committees.

Clinical and treatment variables

Data were obtained from hospital medical records on demographic, clinical and procedural factors involved in the management of patients with ACS. Diabetes status at admission was based on a self-reported physician diagnosis and was further classified by treatment type as diet only, oral hypoglycaemic agent(s), or needing insulin therapy. Those who were insulin-dependent included patients with type 1 diabetes. The estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) was obtained from serum creatinine measurements and the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease formula.14 The Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events (GRACE) risk score containing relevant prognostic factors was derived for each patient.15 A discharge prescription of aspirin, clopidogrel, a statin, β-blocker, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor or angiotensin-receptor (AR) antagonist was recorded. Early invasive management was defined as angiography at any time during the acute hospital stay, regardless of transfer between acute hospitals. The use of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was also recorded. All data were collected by trained clinical coordinators.

All-cause mortality and time of death were determined to 12 months after the index hospitalisation. Vital status at 12 months could be confirmed in 99.9% (1741) of the cohort. Data on late non-fatal recurrent MI (re-MI), stroke and coronary revascularisation were obtained from hospital discharge summaries and diagnosis-related group (DRG) coding reports.

Results

Of the 1744 patients in the analysis, 24.3% (423) had a history of diabetes; about a third of these were treated with diet alone, a quarter required insulin therapy, and the remainder were taking oral hypoglycaemic agent(s) (Box 1). Patients with diabetes were older and more likely than non-diabetic patients to have a prior history of hypertension, dyslipidaemia, atrial fibrillation, established atherosclerotic vascular disease, and previous coronary artery revascularisation, but were less likely to be current smokers and to present initially with STEMI. During hospitalisation, those with diabetes were more likely to have Killip Class II–IV heart failure, renal impairment, and a higher GRACE risk score.

Guideline-recommended therapies and invasive management

Patients with diabetes were less likely than non-diabetic patients to be taking aspirin, clopidogrel, a statin or a β-blocker at hospital discharge, but were more likely to be taking an ACE-inhibitor or AR-antagonist (Box 2). Patients with diabetes were less likely to undergo early angiography than non-diabetic patients (67.6% versus 82.1%), and had a lower overall rate of any coronary revascularisation (PCI/CABG) (46.6% versus 61.3%).

Determinants of long-term outcomes

After 12 months, patients with diabetes had about twice the mortality rate of non-diabetic patients (16.3% versus 7.3%), and also about twice the rate of combined death, non-fatal re-MI or stroke (28.4% versus 16.4%) (Box 2).

Twelve-month survival curves by type of diabetes treatment are shown in Box 3. All groups of diabetic patients, regardless of therapy type, had worse survival than non-diabetic patients (log-rank P < 0.001).

Compared with non-diabetic patients, those with diabetes had an 80% higher adjusted hazard of 12-month mortality (HR, 1.79; 95% CI, 1.18–2.72; P = 0.007), with the highest hazard in those requiring insulin therapy (HR, 2.53; 95% CI, 1.50–4.28; P = 0.005) (Box 4). Invasive management and the prescription at discharge of aspirin, a statin, β-blocker and/or ACE-inhibitor/AR-antagonist were each associated with a significantly reduced hazard of late mortality (Box 4). However, clopidogrel use was associated with an increased mortality hazard. These same treatment covariates, with the exception of a β-blocker and ACE inhibitor/AR-antagonist, were also independent predictors of a reduction in combined death, re-MI or stroke (Box 4). When analysis was confined to the subgroup with diabetes, the discharge prescription of a statin (HR, 0.27; P < 0.001), β-blocker (HR, 0.34; P < 0.001), or ACE-inhibitor/AR-antagonist (HR, 0.30; P < 0.001) were each independent predictors of reduced 12-month mortality. Invasive management was also associated with a reduced hazard of death (HR, 0.56; 95% CI, 0.28–1.14), although this did not reach a conventional level of statistical significance (P = 0.11). Nevertheless, the observed 5%–15% differences in rates of individual therapies, including invasive management, between patients with and without diabetes accounted for little of the excess mortality hazard associated with diabetes, with an HR of 1.84 (95% CI, 1.29–2.64), decreasing to 1.79 (95% CI, 1.18–2.72) when the model was adjusted for all therapies.

Discussion

Our study shows that a substantially higher burden of late morbidity and mortality persists among patients with diabetes who present with acute MI, compared with non-diabetic patients, despite advances in the treatment of ACS. Although much of this excess mortality is explained by diabetes itself, a failure to use evidence-based pharmacotherapies and invasive treatment may also contribute.

A history of diabetes was present in nearly a quarter of patients who presented with acute MI, consistent with results of previous investigations of patients with ACS.2-4,6,7,16 Similarly, we found that patients with MI who have diabetes have an inherently higher cardiovascular risk than those without diabetes because of their older age, and higher prevalence of coronary risk factors, established cardiovascular disease and comorbidities, including heart failure and chronic renal impairment.2-4,6,7 However, despite controlling for these risk factors and comorbidities in our analysis, diabetes remained a strong independent predictor of late mortality. Although diabetic patients as a group had a worse late clinical outcome, those needing insulin appeared to be at highest risk. This contrasts with a previous investigation, which found that insulin dependence did not portend a worse long-term outcome after controlling for differences in risk characteristics, such as advanced age, longer duration of diabetes and the more severe disease in those who required insulin.17

Treatment practices: It has been shown that patients with diabetes and ACS derive even greater benefit than their non-diabetic counterparts from proven risk-modifying therapies.8-10,18 Despite this, we found that, within contemporary Australian clinical practice, there remains a disparity in the use of guideline-recommended treatments to the disadvantage of patients with diabetes (Box 2). As a group, diabetic patients at discharge were less likely than non-diabetic patients to be receiving long-term treatment with aspirin, clopidogrel, a statin or a β-blocker, although they were more likely to be receiving an ACE-inhibitor or AR-antagonist.

Moreover, analysis showed that the discharge prescription of aspirin, a statin, β-blocker, or ACE-inhibitor/AR-antagonist were each associated with a significantly reduced hazard of late deaths and serious cardiovascular events, although prescription of clopidogrel was associated with an increased hazard (Box 4). The latter finding could have been the result of unmeasured confounding or reverse causality (ie, patients who are sicker and more likely to die are also more likely to be prescribed treatments), as clinical trial evidence consistently supports a benefit for clopidogrel in the treatment of high-risk patients with ACS, with or without PCI.19-22 However, an adverse effect of clopidogrel in some patient subsets cannot be excluded, as suggested for patients with diabetic nephropathy in a post-hoc analysis of the CHARISMA (Clopidogrel for High Atherothrombotic Risk and Ischemic Stabilization, Management, and Avoidance) trial, which did not include patients with ACS.23

A similar underutilisation of evidence-based pharmacotherapies among diabetic patients with ACS has been demonstrated by data from recent international registries.3-7 Discordance between the level of risk and intensity of evidence-based treatment in patients with ACS appears to be a widespread problem that will be overcome only with targeted strategies.24

Invasive management: Diabetic patients who present with ACS are more likely than non-diabetic patients to have multivessel and more diffuse coronary artery disease, and to derive greater benefit from an early invasive strategy.10,18 However, invasive procedures are often reported to be less used in diabetic patients than in non-diabetic patients, despite current trends towards early revascularisation for high-risk patients with ACS.5-7 This disparity was also seen in our study, where diabetic patients had a lower rate of early angiography and coronary revascularisation. Similar to the finding reported in the total ACACIA cohort,12 our analysis confirms that a relative long-term mortality advantage is associated with the provision of invasive management among high-risk patients with ACS and documented MI.

A limitation of this study was that the diagnosis of diabetes was based on self-report, and we were unable to evaluate patients with previously unrecognised diabetes. However, the described differences in outcome might have been even more pronounced had we investigated more actively for diabetes. We did not ascertain the adequacy of metabolic control among the diabetic patients studied, but another recent clinical trial failed to show that intensive metabolic control by means of the acute introduction of long-term insulin had a positive effect on mortality and morbidity in patients with diabetes and acute myocardial infarction (DIGAMI 2).25 Our results have to be interpreted cautiously as causal associations cannot be proven using observational data. Furthermore, we are unable to account for unmeasured factors that influence the clinical decision not to prescribe certain cardiac medications or undertake angiography, and these unmeasured factors may have had an important effect on late clinical outcomes.

A concerted effort must be made to optimise the application of evidence-based guideline treatments, including an early invasive management strategy in patients with diabetes who develop ACS.

1 Patient characteristics, by diabetes history at admission*

Characteristic

No diabetes (n = 1321)

Diabetes (n = 423)


Mean age (years) (SD)

64.6 (13.6)

66.4 (11.9)

Male sex

936 (70.9%)

292 (69.0%)

Hypertension

706 (53.4%)

326 (77.1%)

Dyslipidaemia

640 (48.4%)

282 (66.9%)

Current smoking

385 (29.1%)

89 (21.0%)

Diabetes treatment

Diet only

na

135 (31.9%)

Oral hypoglycaemic agent(s)

na

187 (44.2%)

Insulin

na

101 (23.9%)

Family history of coronary artery disease

444 (33.6%)

118 (27.9%)

Prior myocardial infarction

271 (20.5%)

114 (26.9%)

Prior percutaneous coronary intervention

151 (11.4%)

69 (16.3%)

Prior coronary artery bypass grafting

115 (8.7%)

67 (18.8%)

Prior atrial fibrillation

104 (7.9%)

57 (13.5%)

Prior cerebrovascular accident

60 (4.5%)

38 (9.0%)

Prior peripheral vascular disease

62 (4.7%)

45 (10.6%)

Admission diagnosis

Acute STEMI

592 (44.8%)

133 (31.4%)

Non-ST segment elevation ACS

729 (55.2%)

290 (68.8%)

Killip Class II–IV

254 (19.2%)

141 (33.3%)

eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73m2

333 (25.2%)

169 (39.9%)

Median GRACE score (interquartile range)

137 (12–167)

145 (119–171)


na = not applicable. STEMI = ST segment elevation myocardial infarction.
ACS = acute coronary syndrome.
eGFR = estimated glomerular filtration rate. * Values are number of patients (%) unless otherwise indicated.
 Killip class (scale I–IV) is a risk stratification tool for patients after myocardial infarction; a low Killip class indicates a lower likelihood of death within the first 30 days than a high Killip class.
 GRACE = Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events risk score.

4 Diabetes and other independent predictors of 12-month all-cause mortality and death, myocardial infarction and stroke events

All-cause mortality


Death, re-MI or stroke


Variable

Hazard ratio (95% CI)

P

Hazard ratio (95% CI)

P


Age, per decade > 65 years

1.01 (1.00–1.02)

0.03

1.01 (1.00–1.01)

ns

Prior myocardial infarction

1.56 (1.10–2.20)

0.01

1.83 (1.43–2.30)

< 0.001

Killip Class

1.42 (1.10–1.82)

0.006

1.45 (1.23–1.74)

< 0.001

GRACE score

< 100 

1.00

1.00

101–150 

1.37 (0.37–5.06)

ns

1.16 (0.67–2.04)

ns

151–200

3.43 (0.74–15.93)

0.11

1.32 (0.70–2.50)

ns

> 200

6.08 (1.15–32.24)

0.03

1.61 (0.75–3.46)

ns

eGFR< 60 mL/min/1.73 m2

1.26 (0.82–1.94)

ns

1.35 (1.07–1.72)

0.01

Dialysis

2.77 (1.32–5.79)

0.007

3.35 (2.23–5.03)

< 0.001

Angiogram

0.56 (0.38–0.83)

0.004

0.68 (0.51–0.90)

0.007

Discharge medications

Aspirin

0.58 (0.39–0.86)

0.006

0.59 (0.43–0.82)

0.002

Statin

0.29 (0.19–0.43)

< 0.001

0.48 (0.35–0.65)

< 0.001

β-Blocker

0.57 (0.41–0.79)

0.001

0.75 (0.55–1.04)

ns

ACE inhibitor/AR antagonist

0.49 (0.34–0.71)

< 0.001

0.80 (0.59–1.04)

ns

Clopidogrel

1.90 (1.29–2.84)

0.001

1.45 (1.15–1.83)

0.001

No history of diabetes

1.00

1.00

Diabetes present

1.79 (1.18–2.72)

0.007

1.44 (1.11–1.86)

0.005

No history of diabetes*

1.00

1.00

Dietary treatment only

1.27 (0.69–2.34)

0.44

1.38 (0.90–2.12)

0.14

Oral hypoglycaemic agent

1.89 (1.21–2.94)

0.005

1.35 (0.99–2.58)

0.06

Insulin therapy

2.53 (1.50–4.28)

0.005

1.71 (1.13–2.58)

0.01


re-MI = recurrent myocardial infarction. ns = not significant. GRACE = Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events. eGFR = estimated glomerular filtration rate. ACE = angiotensin-converting enzyme. AR = angiotensin receptor.
*  Separate model including all covariates but with diabetes grouped according to treatment type.

Received 24 March 2009, accepted 24 August 2009

  • Joseph Hung1
  • David B Brieger2
  • John V Amerena3
  • Steven G Coverdale4
  • James M Rankin5
  • Carolyn M Astley6
  • Ashish Soman7
  • Derek P Chew6

  • 1 University of Western Australia School of Medicine and Pharmacology, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Perth, WA.
  • 2 Concord Hospital, Sydney, NSW.
  • 3 University of Melbourne Department of Clinical and Biomedical Science, Geelong Hospital, Geelong, VIC.
  • 4 University of Queensland Sunshine Coast Clinical School, Nambour Hospital, Nambour, QLD.
  • 5 Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, WA.
  • 6 Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, SA.
  • 7 sanofi-aventis Australia, Sydney, NSW.


Correspondence: jhung@cyllene.uwa.edu.au

Acknowledgements: 

The ACACIA study was organised and run by the following people:

Steering committee. Derek P Chew (Flinders University/Flinders Medical Centre), John Amerena (Geelong Hospital), David Brieger (Concord Hospital), Steve Coverdale (Nambour Hospital), Ashish Soman (sanofi-aventis Australia), James Rankin (Royal Perth Hospital).

Data management and analysis. Cardiovascular Outcomes Research (COR): Carolyn Astley, Danni Molloy, Sue Mattchoss, Luan Huynh.

Sponsor: sanofi-aventis Australia.

Investigators. Tan Ren (Canberra Hospital, ACT), David Brieger (Concord Hospital, NSW), M A Fitzpatrick (Nepean Hospital, NSW), Peter Fletcher (John Hunter Hospital, NSW), David Rees (St George Hospital, NSW), Craig Juergens (Liverpool Hospital, NSW), Jonathon Waites (Coffs Harbour Hospital, NSW), Greg Nelson (Royal North Shore Hospital, NSW), Michael Sinclair (Dubbo Base Hospital, NSW), John Amarena (Geelong Cardiology Practice, VIC), Yean Lim (Western Hospital, VIC), Mark Horrigan (Austin Health, VIC), Leeanne Grigg (Royal Melbourne Hospital, VIC), David Eccleston (Northern Hospital Clinical Trials Unit, VIC), Greg Szto (Peninsula Private Hospital, VIC), Gishel New (Box Hill Hospital, VIC), Christopher Medley (Wodonga Regional Health Service, VIC), Steven Coverdale (Nambour General Hospital, QLD), Laurie Howes (Gold Coast Hospital, QLD), David Cross (Wesley Hospital, QLD), Paul Garrahy (Princess Alexandra Hospital, QLD), Darren Walters (Prince Charles Hospital, QLD), Spencer Toombes (Toowoomba Health Services, QLD), Prasad Challa (Cairns Base Hospital, QLD), Kumar Gunawardane (Townsville Hospital, QLD), William Parsonage (Royal Brisbane Hospital, QLD), Raj Shetty (Rockhampton Hospital, QLD), Derek Chew (Flinders Medical Centre, SA), Stephen Worthley (Royal Adelaide Hospital, SA), John Horowitz (Queen Elizabeth Hospital, SA), Samuel Varughese (Mt Gambier Hospital, SA), Christopher Zeitz (Port Augusta Hospital, SA), Margaret Arstall (Lyell McEwin Hospital, SA), Jamie Rankin (Royal Perth Hospital, WA), Barry McKeown (Fremantle Hospital, WA), Johan Janssen (Kalgoorlie Regional Hospital, WA), Joseph Hung (Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, WA), Philip Roberts-Thomson (Royal Hobart Hospital, TAS), Marcus Iton (Darwin Private Hospital, NT), and Alex Brown (Menzies School of Health Research, NT).

Competing interests:

The study was sponsored by sanofi-aventis Australia, manufacturer of Plavix (clopidogrel). Analysis of data and writing of the manuscript was conducted independently of the sponsor. The sponsor has reviewed the manuscript.

Joseph Hung received sponsorship from sanofiaventis Australia to attend the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) meeting 2008. David Brieger was provided with an unconditional grant from sanofiaventis to run the CONCORDANCE registry, which is not related to this project, and assistance from sanofiaventis to attend American College of Cardiology (ACC) and ESC meetings. John Amerena has sat on advisory boards and given educational lectures for sanofi-aventis and received sponsorship to attend the ACC meeting 2009. Steven Coverdale received an honorarium for participating in the Steering Committee of the ACACIA Registry and for presentation of data. Ashish Soman is an employee of sanofiaventis Australia and New Zealand. Derek Chew has received speaker honoraria and travel assistance from sanofiaventis Australia.

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