articleNew England Journal of MedicineMar 15, 2010GREEN OA

Effect of Valsartan on the Incidence of Diabetes and Cardiovascular Events

JJJohn J McMurrayJJJohn J.V. McMurraySMSteven M HaffnerMAM Angelyn BethelMBM. Bethel

University of Glasgow · University of Oxford · +32 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

It is not known whether drugs that block the renin-angiotensin system reduce the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular events in patients with impaired glucose tolerance.

Methods

In this double-blind, randomized clinical trial with a 2-by-2 factorial design, we assigned 9306 patients with impaired glucose tolerance and established cardiovascular disease or cardiovascular risk factors to receive valsartan (up to 160 mg daily) or placebo (and nateglinide or placebo) in addition to lifestyle modification. We then followed the patients for a median of 5.0 years for the development of diabetes (6.5 years for vital status). We studied the effects of valsartan on the occurrence of three coprimary outcomes: the development of diabetes; an extended composite outcome of death from cardiovascular causes, nonfatal myocardial infarction, nonfatal stroke, hospitalization for heart failure, arterial revascularization, or hospitalization for unstable angina; and a core composite outcome that excluded unstable angina and revascularization.

Citation impact

669
total citations
FWCI
54.28
Percentile
100%
References
36
Citations per year

Authors

54

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Valsartan
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Incidence (geometry)
  • Internal medicine
  • Renin–angiotensin system
  • Cardiology
  • Type 2 diabetes
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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