Objectives: To evaluate the prognostic value of impaired fasting glucose and diabetes mellitus in male patients with coronary artery disease and poor left ventricular function.
Methods and results: From a prospective database on patients referred for gated myocardial perfusion imaging between 1998 and 2002 all male patients with a history of coronary artery disease and poor left ventricular function were selected. Poor function was defined as left ventricular ejection fraction < or = 40%. Subjects were classified as non-diabetics with fasting blood glucose levels < 110 mg/dL, non-diabetics with impaired fasting glucose (fasting blood glucose between 110 and 125 mg/dL) and diabetics. Median follow-up was 2.7years. End points were all-cause mortality, cardiac death and hospitalization for heart failure. One hundred and sixty patients were selected (age 65 +/- 9 years and left ventricular ejection fraction 29 +/- 8%). In univariate analysis atrial fibrillation, NYHA class, glycaemia and diabetes mellitus discriminated between survivors and non-survivors. In Cox multivariate regression analysis for all-cause mortality only NYHA class and diabetes mellitus remained significant. Kaplan Meier analysis showed that diabetics had the worst survival and non-diabetics with glucose < 110 mg/dL had the best survival. Non-diabetics with impaired fasting glucose had intermediate survival. Analysis for cardiac death/hospitalization for heart failure showed similar results.
Conclusion: In male patients with coronary artery disease and impaired left ventricular function diabetes mellitus and fasting glucose are strongly predictive of poor outcome. Diabetics have the worst prognosis but non-diabetics with impaired fasting glucose also are at higher risk compared to nondiabetics with low fasting blood glucose.