Metabolic
Syndrome: A Misleading 'diagnosis' - Joint European/american
Paper Calls For More Research
ALEXANDRIA, Va., 2006 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Two major
health organizations in Europe and the United States are calling
for closer examination of a syndrome that has been widely
believed to predict the risk of developing heart disease,
questioning whether it has been appropriately defined and
whether it is in fact a syndrome at all.
In a joint
paper published in the September issue of Diabetes Care and
Diabetologia, the American Diabetes Association and European
Association for the Study of Diabetes argue that the metabolic
syndrome -- which has come to be regarded as a predictor of
cardiovascular disease -- is poorly defined, inconsistently
used and in need of further research to help understand whether
and how it should be treated. Doctors, the authors warn, should
not be diagnosing people with this "syndrome" or
attempting to treat it as a separate malady until the science
behind it is clear.
"We
shouldn't be diagnosing people with the 'metabolic syndrome.'
Doing so misleads the patient into believing he or she has
a unique disease. What they really have are well-known cardiovascular
risk factors. The combination of risk factors does not add
up to a more significant or higher cardiovascular risk than
the individual components," according to Richard Kahn,
PhD, Chief Scientific and Medical Officer of the American
Diabetes Association.
The metabolic
syndrome is often defined as having any three or more of the
following: a large waist circumference; high triglyceride
levels; high blood pressure; low HDL ("good") cholesterol;
and high blood glucose levels. The World Health Organization
offers a different definition, including anyone who has diabetes
or insulin resistance and two of the following: high waist-to-hip
ratio; high triglycerides or low HDL cholesterol; high blood
pressure; and a high urinary albumin excretion rate. Other
organizations have put forth yet other definitions.
Consequently,
studies showing a correlation between a combination of these
factors and the risk of developing heart disease are highly
inconsistent. The fact that these are conflicting definitions
implies that there is no clear evidence base for what should
or should not be included, the authors note.
Taken
individually, each of the above conditions is considered a
risk factor for cardiovascular disease and should be treated
as such, the authors state. "But there is no combination
of risk factors that boosts a person's cardiovascular risk
beyond the sum of the parts, or constitutes a separate disease,"
said Ele Ferrannini, MD, President of the European Association
for the Study of Diabetes.
In patients
with diabetes or known vascular disease, inordinate attention
to the 'metabolic syndrome' can impede appropriate care. Similarly,
treatment of each and every metabolic risk factor is indicated
without requiring some arbitrary combination to drive clinical
decision-making.
"The
metabolic syndrome requires much more study before its designation
as a "syndrome" is truly warranted and before its
clinical utility is adequately defined," the authors
wrote in their conclusion.
In the
meantime, the paper recommends that doctors continue to evaluate
patients for the presence of other cardiovascular risk factors
when one is discovered; aggressively treat individual cardiovascular
risk factors; avoid labeling patients with the term "metabolic
syndrome;" and not attempt to prescribe a treatment for
this "syndrome" until new, solid evidence is obtained.
Diabetes
Care, published by the American Diabetes Association, is the
leading peer-reviewed journal of clinical research into the
nation's fifth leading cause of death by disease. Diabetes
also is a leading cause of heart disease and stroke, as well
as the leading cause of adult blindness, kidney failure and
non-traumatic amputations. For more information about diabetes,
visit the American Diabetes Association Web site http://www.diabetes.org
or call 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383).
SOURCE
American Diabetes Association
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(C) 2006 PR Newswire. All Rights Reserved.
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