OBJECTIVE - To investigate cardiovascular drug use and hospitalizations att
ributable to type 2 diabetes from I year before until 6 years after the sta
rt of oral antidiabetic therapy.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS - In this cohort study, 2,584 patients With typ
e 2 diabetes were selected from the PHARMO Record Linkage System, comprisin
g pharmacy records and hospitalizations for all 320,000 residents of six Du
tch Cities. Patients with type 2 diabetes were identified as incident oral
antidiabetic drug users between 1992 and 1997, Nondiabetic subjects were 1:
1-matched for age, sex, pharmacy, and index date and received no insulin, o
ral antidiabetic drugs, or glucose-testing supplies,
RESULTS - Patients with type 2 diabetes were more likely to use cardiovascu
lar drugs (RR 1.28 [95% CI 1.23-1.34]) and to be hospitalized because of ca
rdiovascular diseases (1.54 [1.33-1.78]) after the start of oral antidiabet
ic therapy than nondiabetic subjects, Differences between patients with typ
e 2 diabetes and nondiabetic subjects lessened from I year before until 6 y
ears after the start of oral antidiabetic therapy, reflected by decreasing
attributable risks lot, diuretics, beta -blockers, calcium channel blockers
, and cardiac and antithrombotic drugs. The difference in use of angiotensi
n-converting enzyme inhibitors and lipid-lowering drugs increased. Cardiova
scular hospitalizations attributable to type 2 diabetes were similar to 50%
in the years close to the start of oral antidiabetic treatment and decreas
ed to similar to 33% in the following),cars.
CONCLUSIONS - Although cardiovascular drug use and hospitalizations remaine
d increased in patients with type 2 diabetes after the start of oral antidi
abetic therapy, cardiovascular drug use attributable to type 2 diabetes dec
reased after the start of oral antidiabetic therapy, especially beta -block
ers, whereas cardiovascular hospitalizations First decreased and then stabi
lized.