Aortic valve calcification across stages of dysglycemia in middle-aged individuals from the general population
- Open Access
- 01-12-2025
- Prediabetes
- Research
- Authors
- Anne Wang
- Carl Johan Östgren
- Anna Norhammar
- David Kylhammar
- Tomas Jernberg
- Lars Lind
- Stefan Söderberg
- Anders Blomberg
- Gunnar Engström
- Göran Bergström
- Magnus Settergren
- Bahira Shahim
- Published in
- Cardiovascular Diabetology | Issue 1/2025
Abstract
Background
Aortic valve calcification (AVC) is an underlying pathophysiological mechanism in aortic stenosis, which shares many risk factors with diabetes. However, the association between dysglycemia and early stages of AVC remains unclear. The aim was to examine the associations between stages of dysglycemia and signs of AVC among middle-aged individuals from the general population.
Methods
This was a cross-sectional study from the Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS) randomly enrolling 30,154 middle-aged men and women from six study sites in Sweden between 2013 and 2018. Glycemic status was based on the World Health Organization criteria (fasting blood glucose and/or HbA1c) and questionnaire-based answers on previous diseases and categorized as normoglycemia, prediabetes, newly detected diabetes and known diabetes. AVC was assessed on cardiac computed tomography (CT) and defined as evident or not.
Results
Of 29,331 individuals with data on glycemic status and AVC available, mean age was 57.5 years and normoglycemia was present in 76%, prediabetes in 16%, newly detected diabetes in 3% and known diabetes in 5%. The prevalence of AVC increased progressively across glycemic categories, particularly in males (8%, 11%, 14% and 17%; P < 0.01) compared to females (5%, 6%, 8% and 9%; P < 0.01). There was an association with AVC already in the early stages of dysglycemia; prediabetes (OR 1.16, 95% CI 1.02–1.31), newly detected diabetes (1.34 [1.05–1.71]) and known diabetes (1.61 [1.34–1.93]) after adjusting for age, sex, smoking, study site, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol and hypertension.
Conclusions
In this large, contemporary, and randomly selected population of middle-aged individuals, prediabetes, newly detected diabetes and known diabetes were all associated with CT-detected AVC. Further studies are warranted to investigate if managing dysglycemia, even in its early stages, may help slow down AVC progression.
Graphical abstract
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- Title
- Aortic valve calcification across stages of dysglycemia in middle-aged individuals from the general population
- Authors
-
Anne Wang
Carl Johan Östgren
Anna Norhammar
David Kylhammar
Tomas Jernberg
Lars Lind
Stefan Söderberg
Anders Blomberg
Gunnar Engström
Göran Bergström
Magnus Settergren
Bahira Shahim
- Publication date
- 01-12-2025
- Publisher
- BioMed Central
- Keyword
- Prediabetes
- Published in
-
Cardiovascular Diabetology / Issue 1/2025
Electronic ISSN: 1475-2840 - DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-025-02634-7
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