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Published in: Cardiovascular Diabetology 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Original investigation

Skin collagen advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) and the long-term progression of sub-clinical cardiovascular disease in type 1 diabetes

Authors: Vincent M Monnier, Wanjie Sun, Xiaoyu Gao, David R Sell, Patricia A Cleary, John M Lachin, Saul Genuth, The DCCT/EDIC Research Group

Published in: Cardiovascular Diabetology | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

We recently reported strong associations between eight skin collagen AGEs and two solubility markers from skin biopsies obtained at DCCT study closeout and the long-term progression of microvascular disease in EDIC, despite adjustment for mean glycemia. Herein we investigated the hypothesis that some of these AGEs (fluorescence to be reported elsewhere) correlate with long-term subclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD) measurements, i.e. coronary artery calcium score (CAC) at EDIC year 7–9 (n = 187), change of carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) from EDIC year 1 to year 6 and 12 (n = 127), and cardiac MRI outcomes at EDIC year 15–16 (n = 142).

Methods

Skin collagen AGE measurements obtained from stored specimens were related to clinical data from the DCCT/EDIC using Spearman correlations and multivariable logistic regression analyses.

Results

Spearman correlations showed furosine (early glycation) was associated with future mean CAC (p < 0.05) and CAC >0 (p = 0.039), but not with CAC score <100 vs. >100. Glucosepane and pentosidine crosslinks, methylglyoxal hydroimidazolones (MG-H1) and pepsin solubility (inversely) correlated with IMT change from year 1 to 6(all P < 0.05). Left ventricular (LV) mass (cMRI) correlated with MG-H1, and inversely with pepsin solubility (both p < 0.05), while the ratio LV mass/end diastolic volume correlated with furosine and MG-H1 (both p < 0.05), and highly with CML (p < 0.01). In multivariate analysis only furosine (p = 0.01) was associated with CAC. In contrast IMT was inversely associated with lower collagen pepsin solubility and positively with glucosepane,

Conclusions

In type 1 diabetes, multiple AGEs are associated with IMT progression in spite of adjustment for A1c implying a likely participatory role of glycation and AGE mediated crosslinking on matrix accumulation in coronary arteries. This may also apply to functional cardiac MRI outcomes, especially left ventricular mass. In contrast, early glycation measured by furosine, but not AGEs, was associated with CAC score, implying hyperglycemia as a risk factor in calcium deposition perhaps via processes independent of glycation.
Trial registration: Registered at Clinical trial reg. nos. NCT00360815 and NCT00360893, http://​www.​clinicaltrials.​gov
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Metadata
Title
Skin collagen advanced glycation endproducts (AGEs) and the long-term progression of sub-clinical cardiovascular disease in type 1 diabetes
Authors
Vincent M Monnier
Wanjie Sun
Xiaoyu Gao
David R Sell
Patricia A Cleary
John M Lachin
Saul Genuth
The DCCT/EDIC Research Group
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Cardiovascular Diabetology / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1475-2840
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-015-0266-4

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