Role of diuretics, beta blockers, and statins in increasing the risk of diabetes in patients with impaired glucose tolerance: reanalysis of data from the NAVIGATOR study.

Title in English Role of diuretics, beta blockers, and statins in increasing the risk of diabetes in patients with impaired glucose tolerance: reanalysis of data from the NAVIGATOR study
Authors

SHEN L. SHAH B.R. REYES E.M. THOMAS L. WOJDYLA D. DIEM P. LEITER L.A. CHARBONNEL B. MAREEV V. HORTON E.S. HAFNER S.M. SOŠKA Vladimír HOLMAN R. BETHEL M.A. SCHAPER F. SUN J.L. MCMURRAY J.J. CALIFF R.M. KRUM H.

Year of publication 2013
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f6745
Field Cardiovascular diseases incl. cardiosurgery
Keywords diuretic; beta-blocker; statin; diabetes
Description Objective To examine the degree to which use of beta blockers, statins, and diuretics in patients with impaired glucose tolerance and other cardiovascular risk factors is associated with new onset diabetes. Design Reanalysis of data from the Nateglinide and Valsartan in Impaired Glucose Tolerance Outcomes Research (NAVIGATOR) trial. Setting NAVIGATOR trial. Participants Patients who at baseline (enrolment) were treatment naive to beta blockers (n=5640), diuretics (n=6346), statins (n=6146), and calcium channel blockers (n=6294). Use of calcium channel blocker was used as a metabolically neutral control. Main outcome measures Development of new onset diabetes diagnosed by standard plasma glucose level in all participants and confirmed with glucose tolerance testing within 12 weeks after the increased glucose value was recorded. The relation between each treatment and new onset diabetes was evaluated using marginal structural models for causal inference, to account for time dependent confounding in treatment assignment. Results During the median five years of follow-up, beta blockers were started in 915 (16.2%) patients, diuretics in 1316 (20.7%), statins in 1353 (22.0%), and calcium channel blockers in 1171 (18.6%). After adjusting for baseline characteristics and time varying confounders, diuretics and statins were both associated with an increased risk of new onset diabetes (hazard ratio 1.23, 95% confidence interval 1.06 to 1.44, and 1.32, 1.14 to 1.48, respectively), whereas beta blockers and calcium channel blockers were not associated with new onset diabetes (1.10, 0.92 to 1.31, and 0.95, 0.79 to 1.13, respectively). Conclusions Among people with impaired glucose tolerance and other cardiovascular risk factors and with serial glucose measurements, diuretics and statins were associated with an increased risk of new onset diabetes, whereas the effect of beta blockers was non-significant.

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