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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Feb 19.
Published in final edited form as: J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013 Feb 19;61(7):702–711. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2012.11.036

Prognostic Impact of the Presence and Absence of Angina on Mortality and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Stable Coronary Artery Disease

Results from the BARI 2D (Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes) Trial

Gilles R Dagenais *, Jiang Lu , David P Faxon , Peter Bogaty *, Dale Adler , Francisco Fuentes §, Jorge Escobedo ||, Ashok Krishnaswami , James Slater #, Robert L Frye **; the BARI 2D Study Group
PMCID: PMC3701296  NIHMSID: NIHMS427727  PMID: 23410541

Abstract

Objectives

The purpose of this analysis was to assess in patients with type 2 diabetes and stable coronary artery disease (CAD) whether the risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events varied according to the presence or absence of angina and angina equivalent symptoms.

Background

Data on the prognostic value of symptoms in these patients are limited.

Methods

Post-hoc analysis was performed in 2,364 patients with type 2 diabetes and documented CAD enrolled in the BARI 2D (Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes) trial to determine the occurrence of death and composite of death, myocardial infarction, and stroke during a 5-year follow-up according to cardiac symptoms at baseline.

Results

There were 1,434 patients with angina (A), 506 with angina equivalents (E), and 424 with neither of these (N). The cumulative death rates (total 316) were 12% in A, 14% in E, and 10% in N (p = 0.3), and cardiovascular composite rates (total 548) were 24% in A, 24% in E, and 21% in N (p =0.5). Compared with N, the hazard ratios adjusted for confounders were not different for death in A (1.11; 99% CI: 0.81 to 1.53) and E (1.17; 99% CI: 0.81 to 1.68) or for cardiovascular events in A (1.17; 99% CI: 0.92 to 1.50) and E (1.11; 99% CI: 0.84 to 1.48).

Conclusions

Whatever their symptom status, patients with type 2 diabetes and stable CAD were at similar risk of cardiovascular events and death. These findings suggest that these patients may be similarly managed in terms of risk stratification and preventive therapies. (Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes [BARI 2D]; NCT00006305)

Keywords: angina, coronary artery disease, silent ischemia, type 2 diabetes


Patients with type 2 diabetes and stable coronary artery disease (CAD) may present with typical angina, angina equivalents such as effort dyspnea, or no cardiac symptoms. Such diversity raises the question whether symptom status affects prognosis in these patients. Silent ischemia may be the first manifestation of ischemic heart disease and may occur following coronary revascularization in previously symptomatic patients. Exertional dyspnea as an angina equivalent could be a manifestation of ischemia-induced systolic and/or diastolic dysfunction and might signal severe coronary disease portending a worse prognosis. On the other hand, patients with typical angina might come to earlier medical attention and treatment and have a better prognosis than patients without “warning” symptoms. Prognostic studies of patients with these clinical presentations are few, have disparate findings, and are limited by small sample size, lack of documentation of CAD, and short follow-up (13). Given the limited and inconclusive evidence base and the need to optimize risk stratification in patients with type 2 diabetes and stable CAD, it is important to determine whether symptom status impacts prognosis in these patients.

The BARI 2D (Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes) trial was carried out in 2,368 patients with type 2 diabetes and stable CAD with documented myocardial ischemia who were followed for 5.3 years. At entry into the study, BARI 2D patients had angina, angina equivalents, or no cardiac symptoms (4). Data from this trial constitute an important source of information to assess the prognostic relevance of symptom status in these patients. We thus tested the hypothesis that BARI 2D patients without angina or angina equivalent symptoms at entry have a risk of all-cause mortality and cardiovascular events similar to that of patients who have these symptoms.

Methods

The BARI 2D trial was a randomized trial with a 2 ×2 factorial design to determine whether a treatment strategy of prompt coronary revascularization and optimal medical therapy was superior to a strategy of initial optimal medical treatment alone with the option of subsequent revascularization and whether a strategy using insulin-sensitizing agents was more efficient than a strategy using insulin-providing agents to reduce total mortality and the composite of death, nonfatal myocardial infarction (MI) and nonfatal stroke. Details of the BARI 2D trial have been published (46) and are briefly outlined.

Study population

The 2,368 participants in the BARI 2D trial were recruited between January 1, 2001, and March 31, 2005, at 49 clinical sites: 1,499 participants were from the United States, 356 from Brazil, 353 from Canada, 85 from Mexico, and 75 from Austria and the Czech Republic. Participants had to be age ≥25 years and have type 2 diabetes, stable CAD (≥50% stenosis in a major epicardial coronary artery), and myocardial ischemia defined as a positive electrocardiographic, myocardial perfusion scan or echocardiographic test induced by exercise or pharmacological agents or the presence of typical angina with coronary stenosis ≥70%. Patients with unstable angina who became stable on medical therapy before entry into the study were included. All patients had to have suitable coronary anatomy for randomization into either percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) strata or coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) strata. The main exclusion criteria were a clinical indication for immediate revascularization, coronary revascularization within the 12 months before randomization, left main coronary disease, class III or IV heart failure, serum creatinine >2.0 mg/dl (177 μmol/l), and glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) >13.0%. The protocol was approved by each institution’s review board or ethics committee. All participants provided written informed consent.

Classifications of patients by symptoms

The principal investigator at each BARI 2D center had to classify the cardiac symptoms according to a standardized questionnaire into angina, angina equivalents, and no symptoms based on the medical history and findings of the stress test. Angina was characterized by ischemic chest pain occurring on exertion or stress relieved by rest and/or nitroglycerine. The participants with angina were also characterized according to their Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) grades of angina (7) including stabilized unstable angina in grade IV CCS angina. Angina equivalents had to be manifested by dyspnea, fatigue, or diaphoresis on exertion evaluated by the principal investigator as abnormal and attributable to myocardial ischemia. Finally, participants without symptoms were classified as asymptomatic. Patients with both angina and angina equivalents were included in the angina group. Among the 2,368 participants enrolled in the BARI 2D study, there was satisfactory information on baseline angina status in 2,364, and they constituted the sample of the present study.

Treatment and follow-up

Patients randomized to the prompt revascularization strategy had to have PCI or CABG within 4 weeks of randomization. Optimal medical therapy in both strategies consisted of lifestyle management targeting smoking cessation, diet, weight loss, regular physical exercise, and pharmacological therapy to maintain HbA1c <7.0%, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol <100 mg/dl (2.6 mmol/l), and blood pressure ≤130/80 mm Hg. Participants received individualized antiangina medications, including beta-blockers, calcium channel blockers, and long-acting nitrates. If during the study patients developed incapacitating angina or angina equivalent symptoms, if patients had documented worsening ischemia despite optimal medical treatment, or if an acute coronary syndrome occurred, the treating cardiologist could recommend subsequent coronary revascularization, which was defined in the present analysis as the first revascularization procedure for patients randomized to optimal medical strategy or the repeated revascularization procedure for patients randomized to prompt revascularization strategy. Participants were evaluated on a monthly basis for 6 months and every 3 months thereafter for a mean follow-up of 5.3 years.

Outcomes

The outcomes were all-cause death and the composite of all-cause death, nonfatal MI, and nonfatal stroke and have been previously described (4). Events were adjudicated by an independent committee unaware of the study group allocation. Cardiac death included sudden death, fatal MI, congestive heart failure death, death within 30 days of a cardiac procedure, cardiogenic shock, unwitnessed death, and presumed cardiac death. The clinical diagnosis of nonprocedural MI was based on cardiac markers, either troponin or creatine kinase MB, with evidence of ischemia on the basis of symptoms, electrocardiography, or imaging. Stroke was defined as a rapid neurological deficit attributed to an obstruction or rupture of cerebral artery lasting >24 h or <24 h if there was a lesion on computerized tomography or magnetic resonance imaging compatible with an acute stroke.

Statistical analysis

Major comparisons were made among the 3 groups based on baseline symptom status. Analysis of variance was used for comparison of continuous variables and chi-square test for categorical variables. If the 3-group comparison was statistically significant, then post hoc pair-wise comparisons between each pair of symptom status were performed to demonstrate which pair differed significantly. The pairwise comparisons used the Tukey-Kramer test for continuous variables and the Wald test for categorical variables. Furthermore, comparisons among the severity degree (CCS grades) of baseline angina were also conducted for all outcomes. Paralleling the aggregate analysis on all BARI 2D patients, the stratified analyses were performed on the 2 subgroups stratified by the randomization strategy (i.e., the prompt revascularization strategy vs. the optimal medical strategy) to address the possible confounding effect of the initial revascularization procedures on one-half of the BARI 2D patients within 4 weeks of enrollment. The cumulative incidence rate of outcomes was estimated with the Kaplan-Meier method, and rate curves were compared using the log-rank test. Multivariable Cox regression models were built to estimate hazard ratios (HRs). After adjustment for randomized strategies and prespecified revascularization strata (PCI or CABG), the stepwise selection algorithm chose significant confounders from the baseline characteristics, including demographics, clinical history, blood and urine measures, physical status, angiographic characteristics, and relevant medications, as listed in Table 1 and Online Table 1. The interaction effect between baseline angina and randomized treatment strategies was tested and dropped when there was no significant interaction effect. For correction of the multiple comparison issue, the statistical significance level was set at 0.01 by Bonferroni correction. Analyses were performed using SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina), and plots were drawn using R (R Development Core Team, Wien, Austria).

Table 1.

Baseline Characteristics by Baseline Angina Status

Baseline Characteristics None (n =424) Equivalent (n =506) Angina (n =1,434) p Value Among 3 Groups
Age, yrs 63.4 ±8.7 63.5 ±8.9 61.7 ±8.9 <0.0001

Male 78.8 71.3 67.5 <0.0001
Smoking status 0.7
 Never smoked 35.5 31.5 32.9
 Former smoker 53.4 55.4 54.4
 Current smoker 11.1 13.1 12.7

History of hypertension 74.8 84.8 84.1 <0.0001

Duration of diabetes, yrs 8.0 (3.5–14.5) 9.6 (4.2–16.1) 8.0 (3.6–15.2) 0.08

Glycosylated hemoglobin 7.6 ±1.6 7.7 ±1.7 7.7 ±1.6 0.4

Total cholesterol, mg/dl 162 (141–187) 167 (142–190) 164 (141–194) 0.4

LDL cholesterol, mg/dl 91 (75–111) 95 (74–117) 91 (72–114) 0.5

HDL cholesterol, mg/dl 37 (32–44) 36 (31–43) 37 (31–43) 0.7

Triglycerides, mg/dl 141 (97–205) 143 (102–215) 154 (108–224) 0.2

Body mass index, kg/m2 30.7 ±5.3 32.7 ±6.2 31.7 ±6.0 <0.0001

Michigan neuropathy score 2.4 ±1.6 2.5 ±1.7 2.4 ±1.7 0.4

History of myocardial infarction 32.3 30.6 32.5 0.7

History of stroke 7.6 9.7 10.4 0.2

Microalbuminuria 22.6 26.0 21.9 0.2

Macroalbuminuria 9.6 12.0 8.9 0.1

Estimated GFR, ml/min/1.73 m2 74.1 (62.2–91.2) 76.1 (60.2–91.2) 76.7 (63.6–91.6) 0.5

Peripheral artery disease 18.9 25.9 24.5 0.03

Number of coronary vessel disease 0.03
 1 27.9 37.6 33.5
 2 40.7 33.3 35.4
 3 31.4 29.1 31.1

Myocardial jeopardy index score 47.4 ± 24.0 41.6 ± 25.0 44.6 ± 23.8 0.001

Previous PCI 13.7 17.4 22.1 0.0003

Previous CABG surgery 4.0 6.9 7.0 0.08

Left ventricular ejection fraction, % 56.9 ± 11.3 55.0 ± 12.0 58.0 ± 10.3 <0.001

Systolic blood pressure, mm Hg 131 ± 19 132 ± 20 131 ± 20 0.08

Diastolic blood pressure, mm Hg 75 ± 11 74 ± 12 75 ± 11 0.2

Antiplatelets* 15.3 17.8 21.3 0.01

Aspirin 88.2 85.9 88.6 0.3

Long-acting nitrates 16.1 21.4 39.4 <0.0001

Statins 73.1 74.8 75.6 0.6

Beta-blockers 67.5 66.5 76.7 <0.0001

Calcium-channel blockers 29.2 31.5 32.0 0.6

ACE inhibitors or ARBs 76.7 79.0 76.6 0.5

Diuretics 34.2 45.7 37.3 0.0005

Glucose-lowering agents 92.5 93.7 90.2 0.04

Prompt revascularization 32.7 38.2 39.8 0.03

Values are mean ±SD, %, or median (interquartile range).

*

Antiplatelets included ticlopidine, clopidogrel, and others such as dipyridamole or sulfinpyrazone.

Glucose-lowering agents included biguanide, thiazolidinedione, sulfonylurea, meglitinide, phenylalanine derivative, or alpha glucosidase inhibitor.

Coronary revascularization per protocol within 4 weeks of randomization, either PCI or CABG among patients randomized to prompt revascularization arm.

ACE =angiotensin-converting enzyme; ARB =angiotensin receptor blocker; CABG =coronary artery bypass graft; GFR =glomerular filtration rate; HDL =high-density lipoprotein; IQR =interquartile range; LDL =low-density lipoprotein; PCI =percutaneous coronary intervention.

Results

Population baseline characteristics

Among the 2,364 patients at entry into the study, there were 1,434 (61%) with angina, 506 (21%) with angina equivalents, and 424 (18%) with neither angina nor angina equivalents. Among the 1,434 patients with angina, 1,005 had CCS grades I and II and 429 had CCS grades III and IV. Baseline characteristics by angina status are summarized in Table 1. The significant results from the pairwise comparisons are presented for each with p <0.01. Compared with patients in the other groups, patients with angina were younger, were more often women, and were more frequently on beta-blockers and nitrates. Patients with angina had more previous PCIs than asymptomatic patients and a slightly higher left ventricular ejection fraction compared with patients with equivalent angina. Compared with the other groups, the asymptomatic group had a higher rate of men and a lower rate of hypertension; the asymptomatic patients had a higher index of myocardium at risk compared with patients with equivalent angina. Patients with equivalent angina were more frequently on diuretics compared with the others. Body mass index (BMI) differed among the 3 groups. There was no significant difference among the 3 groups with respect to the duration of diabetes, neuropathy score, lipid and glucose profiles, blood pressure, smoking status, renal function, previous MI, stroke, or use of aspirin, statins, and renin-angiotensin modulators.

Treatment of patients during the follow-up

Compared with the baseline observations, each of the 3 groups at the 3-year follow-up had a decrease in the rates of current smokers, HbA1c, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and blood pressure and an increase in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. However, there was a small but significant increase in BMI in the 3 groups. Use of long-acting nitrates decreased, and use of beta-blockers and calcium channel blockers increased; there was significantly higher use of nitrates and calcium blockers in the angina group. During the 3-year follow-up, the asymptomatic patients had a lower rate of subsequent PCI than the patients in the other 2 groups, but there was no difference in the rates of subsequent CABG among the 3 groups (Online Table 2). At the 5-year follow-up, the cumulative Kaplan-Meier rates of the subsequent revascularization (PCI or CABG) were 25% (98 of 424) in the asymptomatic group, 32% (144 of 506) in the equivalent angina group, and 35% (450 of 1,434) in the angina group (p <0.001). The 4 main independent reasons for revascularization in the asymptomatic group at entry were acute coronary syndrome in 28.6%, worsened ischemia in 22.4%, severe angina in 22.4%, and CAD progression in 12%. For the angina equivalent and angina groups, it was severe angina in 45% for both groups, acute coronary syndrome in 22.2% and 23.3%, worsened ischemia in 14.6% and 17.8%, and CAD progression in 11.8% and 6.4%, respectively.

Outcomes

At the 5-year follow-up, there were 316 deaths and 548 patients with a first occurrence of the composite of all-cause death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke. The cumulative 5-year death rate was 12% in patients with angina, 14% in patients with angina equivalents, and 10% in asymptomatic patients (log-rank p = 0.3). The cumulative 5-year composite outcome rate was 24% in patients with angina, 24% in patients with angina equivalents, and 21% in asymptomatic patients (Fig. 1). As shown in Table 2, there was no difference in the unadjusted HR as well as the HR adjusted for all covariates between the asymptomatic group and each of the symptomatic groups for all-cause mortality, composite outcome, cardiovascular disease (CVD) death, non-fatal MI, and nonfatal stroke.

Figure 1. Kaplan-Meier Event Rates According to Symptom Status at Entry.

Figure 1

The events are the first occurrence of the composite outcome (all-cause death, nonfatal myocardial infarction [MI], or nonfatal stroke), death; MI is nonfatal MI, and stroke is nonfatal stroke. None represents patients with neither angina nor angina equivalent (Equiv.). There were no differences among the 3 groups for each event according to log-rank test. K-M =Kaplan-Meier.

Table 2.

5-Year Cumulative Rates of Outcomes and Hazard Ratios

Outcome All Patients
None (n =424) Equivalent (n =506) Angina (n =1,434) CCS I and II (n =1,005) CCS III and IV (n =429)
All-cause death
 Rates, % (n)* 10 (51) 14 (78) 12 (187) 11 (124) 12 (63)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.32 (0.83–2.09) 1.14 (0.76–1.71) 1.08 (0.70–1.66) 1.27 (0.78–2.07)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.17 (0.81–1.68) 1.11 (0.81–1.53) 1.10 (0.79–1.54) 1.14 (0.77–1.69)
Death/MI/stroke
 Rates, % (n) 21 (90) 24 (121) 24 (337) 23 (225) 26 (112)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.12 (0.78–1.61) 1.15 (0.85–1.57) 1.09 (0.79–1.50) 1.30 (0.91–1.88)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.11 (0.84–1.48) 1.17 (0.92–1.50) 1.14 (0.88–1.47) 1.26 (0.93–1.69)
CVD death
 Rates, % (n) 5 (22) 8 (36) 6 (91) 6 (59) 7 (32)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.39 (0.69–2.80) 1.26 (0.68–2.32) 1.17 (0.61–2.22) 1.47 (0.72–3.01)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.17 (0.67–1.57) 1.20 (0.74–1.96) 1.18 (0.71–1.96) 1.25 (0.70–2.22)
Nonfatal MI
 Rates, % (n) 11 (46) 11 (53) 14 (179) 14 (121) 15 (58)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 0.98 (0.59–1.65) 1.21 (0.79–1.85) 1.15 (0.74–1.80) 1.33 (0.80–2.21)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.04 (0.69–1.57) 1.22 (0.86–1.72) 1.20 (0.84–1.72) 1.26 (0.83–1.91)
Nonfatal stroke
 Rates, % (n) 3 (10) 2 (11) 3 (46) 3 (27) 5 (19)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 0.94 (0.30–2.88) 1.42 (0.58–3.49) 1.18 (0.45–3.06) 2.02 (0.74–5.52)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 0.86 (0.36–2.02) 1.10 (0.54–2.21) 0.92 (0.44–1.92) 1.54 (0.70–3.38)
Patients Randomized to Optimal Medical Therapy
None (n =235) Equivalent (n =254) Angina (n =702) CCS I and II (n =526) CCS III and IV (n =176)
All-cause death
 Rates, % (n) 12 (31) 15 (42) 11 (88) 16 (65) 10 (23)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.29 (0.70–2.36) 0.98 (0.57–1.68) 0.98 (0.56–1.71) 0.98 (0.48–2.00)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.27 (0.68–2.38) 1.07 (0.61–1.86) 1.08 (0.60–1.93) 1.03 (0.49–2.19)
Death/MI/stroke
 Rates, % (n) 23 (54) 27 (66) 24 (163) 25 (121) 22 (42)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.12 (0.70–1.80) 1.02 (0.68–1.53) 1.03 (0.67–1.56) 1.01 (0.59–1.72)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.22 (0.74–2.00) 1.17 (0.76–1.80) 1.21 (0.77–1.89) 1.04 (0.58–1.85)
CVD death
 Rates, % (n) 6 (14) 6 (14) 7 (45) 7 (33) 7 (12)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 0.94 (0.35–2.48) 1.10 (0.50–2.41) 1.09 (0.48–2.47) 1.14 (0.41–3.14)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 0.81 (0.29–2.29) 1.20 (0.52–2.77) 1.21 (0.51–2.87) 1.18 (0.40–3.50)
Nonfatal MI
 Rates, % (n) 12 (28) 15 (33) 15 (90) 16 (70) 13 (20)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.13 (0.57–2.16) 1.10 (0.63–1.92) 1.15 (0.65–2.05) 0.95 (0.45–2.02)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.44 (0.71–2.90) 1.32 (0.72–2.40) 1.42 (0.77–2.63) 1.02 (0.46–2.28)
Nonfatal stroke
 Rates, % (n) 3 (6) 2 (5) 3 (24) 3 (16) 5 (8)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 0.76 (0.16–3.63) 1.37 (0.42–4.43) 1.22 (0.36–4.18) 1.82 (0.45–7.30)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 0.57 (0.12–2.78) 0.89 (0.26–3.05) 0.78 (0.21–2.83) 1.23 (0.29–5.18)
Outcome Patients Randomized to Prompt Revascularization Therapy
None (n =189) Equivalent (n =252) Angina (n =732) CCS I and II (n =479) CCS III and IV (n =253)
All-cause death
 Rates, % (n) 8 (20) 13 (36) 12 (99) 11 (59) 13 (40)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.39 (0.68–2.85) 1.36 (0.72–2.56) 1.23 (0.63–2.40) 1.61 (0.80–3.26)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.11 (0.53–2.32) 1.27 (0.66–2.46) 1.21 (0.61–2.40) 1.41 (0.66–3.00)
Death/MI/stroke
 Rates, % (n) 19 (36) 22 (55) 24 (174) 22 (104) 28 (70)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.14 (0.65–1.98) 1.34 (0.84–2.15) 1.20 (0.73–1.97) 1.64 (0.97–2.78)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.08 (0.61–1.92) 1.29 (0.79–2.13) 1.17 (0.70–1.97) 1.58 (0.90–2.78)
CVD death
 Rates, % (n) 4 (8) 9 (22) 6 (46) 5 (26) 8 (20)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 2.10 (0.73–6.09) 1.54 (0.58–4.14) 1.33 (0.47–3.77) 1.95 (0.67–5.74)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.56 (0.53–4.65) 1.33 (0.48–3.70) 1.22 (0.42–3.57) 1.54 (0.50–4.75)
Nonfatal MI
 Rates, % (n) 10 (18) 8 (20) 13 (89) 12 (51) 16 (38)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 0.85 (0.37–1.97) 1.37 (0.71–2.68) 1.18 (0.58–2.40) 1.76 (0.84–3.68)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 0.82 (0.34–1.95) 1.27 (0.63–2.57) 1.13 (0.54–2.36) 1.59 (0.72–3.51)
Nonfatal stroke
 Rates, % (n) 2 (4) 3 (6) 3 (22) 2 (11) 6 (11)
 Unadjusted HR 1.00 1.17 (0.22–6.15) 1.52 (0.37–6.16) 1.13 (0.25–5.11) 2.29 (0.51–10.33)
 Adjusted HR 1.00 1.24 (0.23–6.55) 1.35 (0.32–5.61) 1.03 (0.23–4.73) 2.04 (0.43–9.54)
*

5-year cumulative event number. The CCS grades are subgroups of the angina group. No difference in the event rates among the 3 groups or the subgroups.

HR with 99% CI for each outcome was computed from 2 models using no symptoms as the reference group. 1) baseline angina status as 3 categories: no symptoms, equivalent, and angina. 2) baseline angina status as 4 categories: no symptoms, equivalent, CCS I and II, and CCS III and IV. There was no significant difference in each of the outcomes between the groups.

CCS =Canadian Cardiovascular Society; CVD =cardiovascular disease; HR =hazard ratio; MI =myocardial infarction.

Stratified analyses were performed on patients randomized to the prompt revascularization strategy as well as patients randomized to the optimal medical strategy to address the possible confounding effect of the initial revascularization procedures. In the patients randomized to optimal medical group strategy, there were no significant differences among the asymptomatic, angina equivalent, and angina groups for the cumulative 5-year death rate, death, MI or stroke, CVD death, nonfatal MI, and nonfatal stroke; there was also no difference in the unadjusted and adjusted HR between the 3 groups and the different outcomes (Table 2, Online Fig. 1). Similar findings were observed for the same outcomes in the 3 groups of patients randomized to the prompt revascularization strategy (Table 2, Online Fig. 2).

There was also no difference in the adjusted HR for each outcome between the asymptomatic group and the symptomatic groups when the data were restricted to the 842 patients with either triple-vessel disease or double-vessel disease including left proximal anterior descending coronary artery stenosis (Online Table 3).

The higher rates of outcomes among patients with CCS grades III and IV compared with patients with CCS grades I and II were not statistically different and not different when compared with asymptomatic patients and patients with angina equivalents (Table 2). However, patients with CCS grades III and IV had higher rates of revascularization during the study (Fig. 2).

Figure 2. Kaplan-Meier Rates of First Coronary Revascularization According to CCS Angina Grades.

Figure 2

Participants randomized to the optimal medical strategy (MED) with Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) angina grades III and IV had a higher rate of revascularization compared with participants with CCS angina grades I and II. For participants randomized to the prompt revascularization strategy (REV), only those with CCS angina grade IV had a higher rate of revascularization compared with the 3 other groups. K-M =Kaplan-Meier.

Discussion

In this study, patients with stable CAD and type 2 diabetes had a similar long-term prognosis across a variety of cardiovascular outcomes irrespective of their symptom status. Indeed, asymptomatic patients at entry into the study were at the same relatively high risk for all-cause mortality, the composite outcome, CVD death, nonfatal MI, and nonfatal stroke as patients with angina and patients with angina equivalent symptoms. These observations were independent of clinical baseline characteristics, severity of CAD, and coronary revascularization. Furthermore, the results remained unchanged when the optimal medical therapy arm and the revascularization arm were analyzed separately.

A recent analysis of the symptoms at entry into the BARI 2D patients showed that the absence of angina in the asymptomatic or angina equivalent patients may be explained in part by a previous revascularization (8), but nearly half of them presented with angina during the follow-up (9). Nevertheless, it remains intriguing why patients without angina but with documented myocardial ischemia had no symptoms or an angina equivalent. A study using positron emission tomography to evaluate regional cerebral blood flow suggested that abnormal central nervous system processing of painful stimuli is associated with silent myocardial ischemia (10). Autonomic neuropathy has also been thought to explain the lower frequency of angina in patients with diabetes and evidence of myocardial ischemia compared with patients without diabetes (1114). Regardless of the mechanisms responsible for symptom status in patients with diabetes and CAD, our findings suggest that these very different presentations are not explained by differences in the angiographic severity of CAD nor in left ventricular function.

Patients with and without diabetes and silent myocardial ischemia have better survival than patients with symptomatic ischemia 6 months after PCI (3). However, similar survival rates were reported between 45 asymptomatic and 37 angina patients with diabetes, documented angiographic CAD, and myocardial ischemia during a 6-year follow-up (1). Similar composite outcomes of death and nonfatal MI were found in 286 asymptomatic and 321 angina patients with diabetes and induced myocardial ischemia but without documented CAD during a median follow-up of 2 years (2). Our results confirmed these 2 studies in a much larger population followed for 5.3 years and included more outcomes and showed no difference in survival of patients according to their symptoms even after coronary revascularization. Considering the whole spectrum of silent ischemia in patients with type 2 diabetes, these findings are consistent with the similar survival rates between patients with diabetes with unrecognized MI and those with recognized MI (15).

It might have been expected that the predominance of exertion dyspnea as an angina equivalent would be associated with poorer left ventricular function and outcomes, as reported by Zellweger et al. (2), but this was not the case in our study in which left ventricular ejection fractions were 55%, 58%, and 57% in patients with angina equivalent symptoms, angina, and no symptoms, respectively. However, it is possible that exertion dyspnea may be related to diastolic ventricular dysfunction during exercise-induced ischemia, a variable not assessed in most of the patients. We cannot exclude the possibility that exertion dyspnea might have been related to other non-cardiac factors such as increased BMI and physical deconditioning. It is interesting to note that myocardial jeopardy score was actually significantly highest in the asymptomatic subset and not in the angina equivalent subset. In contrast to the findings of Zellweger et al. (2), we found no significant difference in the outcomes between the patients who had only dyspnea compared with the others who did not (Online Table 4).

Recruitment in the BARI 2D study was completed among patients with stable CAD and myocardial ischemia with mainly mild or no symptoms. However, a third of the patients with angina were classified as CCS grades III and IV, and half of the latter had a stable status before randomization after a recent history of unstable angina. These patients did not have significantly higher rates of events compared with patients with CCS grades I and II, as previously reported in a cohort of consecutive patients undergoing coronary angiographic studies (16). However, participants with CCS grades III and IV angina did have a higher rate of revascularization during the study than those with angina grades I and II. Although this may be one of the factors explaining the nonsignificant differences, the CCS gradation is known to have limitations, particularly for CCS grade IV (17).

Study limitations

Our study was a post-hoc analysis of the BARI 2D trial with its inherent limitations and should be considered as a hypothesis-generating study. The BARI 2D cohort was a selected population with stable CAD anatomy suitable for revascularization without standardized testing to determine the myocardial ischemia threshold. Nevertheless, our study has several strengths: it is based on a large sample of patients with well-documented and detailed baseline characteristics including systematic coronary angiography, myocardial ischemia, intensive risk factor management during a long follow-up, close monitoring, and blinded adjudication of fatal and nonfatal outcomes. Our findings have clinical relevance considering that these relatively high-risk patients with different stable symptomatology have similar cardiovascular prognosis.

Conclusions

Asymptomatic patients with type 2 diabetes, stable CAD, and documented myocardial ischemia are at high risk for all-cause mortality and major cardiovascular outcomes, and their risk is similar to the risk of patients with angina and angina equivalent symptoms. Our findings suggest that all of these patients should be similarly managed in terms of risk stratification and preventive therapies.

Supplementary Material

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Acknowledgments

The BARI 2D study is funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (U01 HL061744, U01 HL061746, U01 HL061748, U01 HL063804). The BARI 2D trial received significant supplemental funding from GlaxoSmithKline, Imaging Inc. (formerly Bristol-Myers Squibb Medical Imaging, Inc.), Astellas Pharma US Inc., Merck & Co. Inc., Lantheus Medical Imaging, Abbott Laboratories Inc., and Pfizer Inc. Generous support was given by Abbott Laboratories Ltd., MediSense Products, Bayer Diagnostics, Becton, Dickinson and Company, Carlson Laboratories, Centocor Inc., Eli Lilly and Company, LipoScience Inc., Merck Sante, Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp., and Novo Nordisk, Inc. A full listing of sponsors can be found in the Online Appendix of the first published article about the BARI 2D trial at http://www.nejm.org (N Engl J Med 2009;360:2503–15). The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, or the National Institutes of Health.

Abbreviations and Acronyms

BMI

body mass index

CABG

coronary artery bypass graft surgery

CAD

coronary artery disease

CVD

cardiovascular disease

HbA1c

glycosylated hemoglobin

MI

myocardial infarction

PCI

percutaneous coronary intervention

Footnotes

All authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.

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