Volume 48, Number 12, 2511-2518, DOI: 10.1007/s00125-005-0017-2

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European Association for the Study of Diabetes

The impact of ethnicity and sex on subclinical cardiovascular disease: the Diabetes Heart Study

B. I. Freedman, F. C. Hsu, C. D. Langefeld, S. S. Rich, D. M. Herrington, J. J. Carr, J. Xu, D. W. Bowden and L. E. Wagenknecht

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Abstract

Aims/hypothesis  

African–Americans with type 2 diabetes and access to adequate healthcare are at lower risk of clinical coronary artery disease than are white diabetic patients. We evaluated whether ethnic differences in subclinical cardiovascular disease, coronary and carotid artery calcified plaque and carotid artery intima–medial thickness (IMT) were present in members of The Diabetes Heart Study families.

Subjects and Methods  

In a bi–racial cohort of 1,180 individuals from families enriched for members with type 2 diabetes, we calculated coronary and carotid artery calcified plaque using fast‐gated helical computed tomography, and measured carotid artery IMT and clinical risk factor profiles. Generalised estimating equations were used to test for an association between measures of subclinical cardiovascular disease and ethnicity and sex.

Results  

After adjustment for age, ethnicity and kidney function, African–Americans had significantly lower amounts of coronary artery calcified plaque (mean±SE) (866±158 vs 1,915±135, respectively; p=0.0466) and carotid artery calcified plaque (179±51 vs 355±27, respectively; p=0.0240) relative to whites, despite having increased carotid IMT (0.71±0.01 vs 0.67±0.004 cm, respectively; p=0.0007), and higher blood pressure, albuminuria and HbA1c. Sex‐specific analyses revealed that African–American men had significantly lower coronary and carotid artery calcified atheroma than white men. In women, ethnic differences in calcified carotid artery plaque, but not coronary artery plaque, were observed.

Conclusions/interpretation  

In families enriched for members with type 2 diabetes, African–American men had markedly lower levels of coronary and carotid artery calcified plaque than white men, despite increased carotid artery IMT and conventional risk factors. These findings suggest that susceptibility to subclinical cardiovascular disease differs markedly according to ethnicity and sex.

Keywords  African American - Carotid intima–medial thickness - Coronary artery calcium - Ethnicity - Gender - Sex - Type 2 diabetes mellitus

B.I. Freedman and F.C. Hsu contributed equally to the preparation of this manuscript

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