Rimpeläinen Kaarina, Jansson Sigfrids Fanny, Gordin Daniel, Klemetti Miira M, Harjutsalo Valma, Groop Per-Henrik, Thorn Lena M
Folkhälsan Research Center, Helsinki, Finland.
Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care, University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital, Helsinki, Finland.
Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2025 Jun 14;24(1):255. doi: 10.1186/s12933-025-02804-7.
Our aim was to assess how pre-eclampsia, gestational hypertension, and chronic (pre-pregnancy) hypertension, compared to no hypertensive disorders during pregnancy, impact development of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality in type 1 diabetes (T1D).
We included 190 T1D women with median age of 29.4 (interquartile range 26.0-33.3) years at delivery between 1988 and 1994 at the Helsinki University Hospital, and who were later re-examined within the Finnish Diabetic Nephropathy Study. Of these, 43 (22.6%) had had pre-eclampsia, 32 (16.8%) gestational hypertension, 20 (10.5%) chronic hypertension, and 95 (50.0%) had remained normotensive during the index pregnancy. We retrieved follow-up data on cardiovascular events and mortality from national registries until the end of 2020.
During a median 27.9 (25.4-30.7) years of follow-up, 46 (24.2%) experienced a composite cardiovascular event and 25 (13.2%) died from any cause. In Cox regression analysis, the risk of a cardiovascular event was increased for chronic hypertension [hazard ratio, HR 3.45 (95% CI 1.25-9.54)], gestational hypertension [HR 3.63 (1.55-8.51)], and pre-eclampsia [HR 5.07 (2.31-11.11)] compared with the non-hypertension group, after adjustment for delivery age and age at T1D onset. The corresponding risk of all-cause mortality was increased for chronic hypertension [HR 3.31 (1.06-10.35)] and pre-eclampsia [HR 2.92 (1.07-7.98)], but not for gestational hypertension [HR 1.26 (0.33-4.85)]. After further adjustment for diabetic kidney disease or diabetic retinopathy as a time-dependent covariate, the association with cardiovascular disease remained for pre-eclampsia and gestational hypertension, while for mortality, none of the associations were significant.
Hypertension during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of cardiovascular events during long-term follow-up in women with T1D, with pre-eclampsia conferring the highest risk. For all-cause mortality, chronic hypertension and pre-eclampsia, but not gestational hypertension, increases the risk of death, yet not independently of diabetic kidney disease.
我们的目的是评估与孕期无高血压疾病相比,子痫前期、妊娠期高血压和慢性(孕前)高血压如何影响1型糖尿病(T1D)患者心血管疾病的发生及全因死亡率。
我们纳入了1988年至1994年间在赫尔辛基大学医院分娩的190例T1D女性,分娩时年龄中位数为29.4岁(四分位间距26.0 - 33.3岁),这些女性后来在芬兰糖尿病肾病研究中接受了再次检查。其中,43例(22.6%)患有子痫前期,32例(16.8%)患有妊娠期高血压,20例(10.5%)患有慢性高血压,95例(50.0%)在本次妊娠期间血压一直正常。我们从国家登记处获取了截至2020年底的心血管事件和死亡率的随访数据。
在中位随访27.9年(25.4 - 30.7年)期间,46例(24.2%)发生了复合心血管事件,25例(13.2%)死于任何原因。在Cox回归分析中,调整分娩年龄和T1D发病年龄后,与非高血压组相比,慢性高血压[风险比,HR 3.45(95%CI 1.25 - 9.54)]、妊娠期高血压[HR 3.63(1.55 - 8.51)]和子痫前期[HR 5.07(2.31 - 1)]发生心血管事件的风险增加。慢性高血压[HR 3.31(1.06 - 10.35)]和子痫前期[HR 2.92(1.07 - 7.98)]全因死亡的相应风险增加,但妊娠期高血压未增加[HR 1.26(0.33 - 4.85)]。将糖尿病肾病或糖尿病视网膜病变作为时间依赖性协变量进一步调整后,子痫前期和妊娠期高血压与心血管疾病的关联仍然存在,而对于死亡率,所有关联均无统计学意义。
孕期高血压与T1D女性长期随访期间心血管事件风险增加相关,子痫前期风险最高。对于全因死亡率,慢性高血压和子痫前期会增加死亡风险,但妊娠期高血压不会,且这种风险增加并非独立于糖尿病肾病。