Human heart

Normalizing Blood Sugar Can Halve Heart Attack Risk

New Research Findings Diabetes IDM

For the first time, an international analysis has shown that when people with prediabetes bring their blood glucose back into the normal range through lifestyle changes, their risk of heart attack, heart failure, and premature death is cut in half. These findings could transform prevention and establish a new, measurable target for clinical guidelines. Among others, researchers from Helmholtz Munich, University Hospital Tübingen and the German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD) took part in the study.

Millions of people in Germany live with elevated blood glucose levels without knowing it. They are considered to have “prediabetes” – an early stage that until now has lacked clearly defined treatment targets. People with prediabetes are usually advised to lose weight, be more physically active, and eat a healthier diet. These lifestyle changes make sense, as they improve fitness, well-being, and several risk factors. However, one crucial question has remained unanswered: Do they also protect the heart in the long term? So far, no lifestyle program for people with prediabetes has been able to clearly demonstrate a sustained reduction in heart attacks, heart failure, or cardiovascular deaths over decades.

Breakthrough in Prevention Research 

A joint analysis of two of the world’s largest diabetes prevention studies, from the United States and China, now provides clarity. Together with colleagues in the U.S. and China, researchers from Helmholtz Munich, the DZD, and University Hospital Tübingen were able to show that the decisive factor is apparently not the lifestyle change itself, but whether people with prediabetes manage to bring their blood glucose back into the normal range – in other words, whether they achieve remission of prediabetes.

Risk to Heart and Vessels Cut In Half

Long-term data from more than 2,400 people with prediabetes show that those who succeed in normalizing their blood glucose have a significantly lower risk of dying from cardiovascular disease or being hospitalized for heart failure than those whose glucose levels remain elevated, even when both groups lose a similar amount of weight. In both studies, participants’ risk of cardiovascular death was reduced by roughly 50%, and overall mortality also fell significantly. The U.S. study followed its participants for 20 years, while its Chinese counterpart tracked participants for 30 years. Under the leadership of the Tübingen team, these datasets were harmonized and reanalyzed to compare rates of cardiovascular death and hospitalization for heart failure in people with and without prediabetes remission.

A New, Measurable Target for Medicine

Cardiovascular prevention has so far rested on three pillars: blood pressure control, lowering LDL cholesterol, and smoking cessation. With these new findings, a fourth pillar could be added: sustained normalization of blood glucose in prediabetes.

“Our results suggest that remission of prediabetes not only delays or prevents the onset of type 2 diabetes, as already known, but also protects people from serious cardiovascular diseases in the long term, over the span of decades,” says Prof. Dr. Andreas Birkenfeld, Director of the Institute of Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases (IDM) at Helmholtz Munich, board member of the DZD and Medical Director of Department of Medicine IV at University Hospital Tübingen.

A fasting blood glucose value of ≤ 97 mg/dL proved to be a simple marker for a persistently lower risk of heart disease, regardless of age, weight, or ethnic background. This threshold could be applied in primary care practices worldwide, making prevention more tangible.

Germany Lagging in International Comparison

Germany is lagging behind when it comes to preventive health care. According to the current Public Health Index, the country ranks second to last among 18 European nations in implementing evidence-based prevention measures. As a result, the risk of dying from cardiovascular disease is significantly higher in Germany than in many neighboring European countries. The new study highlights the untapped potential and shows how concrete target values can substantially improve public health.

“We see a clear therapeutic window: If glucose levels are normalized already at the prediabetes stage, the long-term risk of heart attack, heart failure, and premature death can be markedly reduced. Our data support explicitly anchoring remission as a primary treatment goal in guidelines for the prevention of diabetes and cardiovascular disease,” urges Birkenfeld.

Original Publication

Vazquez Arreola et al., 2025: Prediabetes Remission and Cardiovascular Morbidity and Mortality: A post-hoc analysis from DPPOS and DaQingDPOS. The Lancet. DOI: 10.1016/ S2213-8587(25)00366-3
 

Prof. Andreas Birkenfeld

Director of the Institute of Diabetes Research and Metabolic Diseases (IDM) Helmholtz Munich at the University Hospital Tübingen

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