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With the increasing burden of diabetes as a cause of macro- and microvascular disease linked to the epidemics of obesity, attention is being paid to dysglycaemic states that predict and precede the development of type 2 diabetes. Such conditions, termed pre-diabetes, are characterized by fasting plasma glucose, or plasma glucose levels on an oral glucose tolerance test, or values of glycated haemoglobin intermediate between 'normal' values and those characterizing diabetes. These last are by definition associated, in epidemiological terms, with a higher incidence of microvascular disease-mostly retinopathy. Pre-diabetes overlaps with the components of the 'metabolic syndrome'-among which are excess visceral adiposity; hypertension; hypertriglyceridaemia; high levels of small, dense low-density lipoproteins; and metabolic-associated fatty liver disease. There is little doubt that pre-diabetes has important prognostic implications, especially for the occurrence of myocardial infarction, ischaemic stroke, and peripheral arterial disease. It is disputed, however, whether pre-diabetes is itself an actionable disease entity, in addition to the risk factors characterizing it. Because of this uncertainty, the latest European Society of Cardiology guidelines chose not to include pre-diabetes as a treatment target for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease, at variance from the three previous editions of such guidelines. This is spurring a debate, the Pro and Contra arguments featured in the present debate article.

Original publication

DOI

10.1093/eurheartj/ehae533

Type

Journal article

Journal

Eur Heart J

Publication Date

23/12/2024

Volume

45

Pages

5117 - 5126

Keywords

Acute coronary syndromes, Cardiovascular risk, Diabetes, Guidelines, Impaired glucose tolerance, Oral glucose tolerance test, Pre-diabetes, Prevention, Humans, Cardiovascular Diseases, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Diabetic Angiopathies, Evidence-Based Medicine, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Prediabetic State