Plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality in individuals with and without type 2 diabetes:the Dutch population-based lifelines cohort study

INTRODUCTION: Individuals with type 2 diabetes have a substantially elevated cardiovascular risk. A higher plasma phosphate level promotes vascular calcification, which may adversely affect outcomes in individuals with type 2 diabetes. We hypothesized that the association between plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality is stronger in individuals with type 2 diabetes, compared to those without diabetes. METHODS: We analysed the association between plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality in the Dutch population-based Lifelines cohort and in subgroups with and without type 2 diabetes, using mul... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Vaart, Amarens
Cai, Qingqing
Nolte, Ilja M
van Beek, André P J
Navis, Gerjan
Bakker, Stephan J L
van Dijk, Peter R
de Borst, Martin H
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Reihe/Periodikum: van der Vaart , A , Cai , Q , Nolte , I M , van Beek , A P J , Navis , G , Bakker , S J L , van Dijk , P R & de Borst , M H 2022 , ' Plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality in individuals with and without type 2 diabetes : the Dutch population-based lifelines cohort study ' , Cardiovascular Diabetology , vol. 21 , no. 1 , 61 . https://doi.org/10.1186/s12933-022-01499-4
Schlagwörter: Cohort Studies / Diabetes Mellitus / Type 2 / Ethnicity / Humans / Phosphates / Vascular Calcification/complications
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29027084
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://hdl.handle.net/11370/01cb3d8e-beb5-440f-9107-fd76d700096d

INTRODUCTION: Individuals with type 2 diabetes have a substantially elevated cardiovascular risk. A higher plasma phosphate level promotes vascular calcification, which may adversely affect outcomes in individuals with type 2 diabetes. We hypothesized that the association between plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality is stronger in individuals with type 2 diabetes, compared to those without diabetes. METHODS: We analysed the association between plasma phosphate and all-cause mortality in the Dutch population-based Lifelines cohort and in subgroups with and without type 2 diabetes, using multivariable Cox regression adjusted for potential confounders. Effect modification was tested using multiplicative interaction terms. RESULTS: We included 57,170 individuals with 9.4 [8.8-10.4] years follow-up. Individuals within the highest phosphate tertile (range 1.00-1.83 mmol/L) were at higher risk of all-cause mortality (fully adjusted HR 1.18 [95% CI 1.02-1.36], p = 0.02), compared with the intermediate tertile (range 0.85-0.99 mmol/L). We found significant effect modification by baseline type 2 diabetes status (p-interaction = 0.003). Within the type 2 diabetes subgroup (N = 1790), individuals within the highest plasma phosphate tertile had an increased mortality risk (HR 1.73 [95% CI 1.10-2.72], p = 0.02 vs intermediate tertile). In individuals without diabetes at baseline (N = 55,380), phosphate was not associated with mortality (HR 1.12 [95% CI 0.96-1.31], p = 0.14). Results were similar after excluding individuals with eGFR < 60 mL/min/1.73 m2. DISCUSSION: High-normal plasma phosphate levels were associated with all-cause mortality in individuals with type 2 diabetes. The association was weaker and non-significant in those without diabetes. Measurement of phosphate levels should be considered in type 2 diabetes; whether lowering phosphate levels can improve health outcomes in diabetes requires further study.