Estimated benefits of glycemic control in microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes

被引:166
|
作者
Vijan, S
Hofer, TP
Hayward, RA
机构
[1] VET AFFAIRS CTR PRACTICE MANAGEMENT & OUTCOMES RE, ANN ARBOR, MI USA
[2] UNIV MICHIGAN, SCH MED, ANN ARBOR, MI USA
关键词
diabetes mellitus; non-insulin-dependent; blood glucose; diabetic angiopathies; kidney failure; chronic; diabetic retinopathy;
D O I
10.7326/0003-4819-127-9-199711010-00003
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: The benefits of intensive glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes are not well quantified. It is therefore not clear which patients will benefit most from aggressive glycemic control. Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of glycemic control in type 2 diabetes. Design: Markov decision model. Patients: Diabetic patients at a health maintenance organization. Main Outcome Measures: Risks for developing blindness and end-stage renal disease; number of patients and patient-years needed to treat to prevent complications. Results: For a patient in whom diabetes developed before 50 years of age, reducing hemoglobin A(1c) levels from 9% to 7% results in an estimated 2.3-percentage point decrease (from 2.6% to 0.3%) in lifetime risk for blindness due to retinopathy. The same change in a patient with diabetes onset at 65 years of age would be expected to decrease the risk for blindness by 0.5 percentage points (from 0.5% to < 0.1%). However, the Markov model predicts substantially greater benefit when moving from poor to moderate glycemic control than when moving from moderate to almost-normal glycemic control. Targeting less than 20% of the patients at one health maintenance organization for intensified therapy may prevent more than 80% of the preventable patient-time spent blind. The risks for end-stage renal disease and the risk reduction provided by improved glycemic control are lower than those for blindness. Conclusions: This probability model, based on extrapolation from the experience with type 1 diabetes, suggests that patients with early onset of type 2 diabetes will accrue substantial benefit from almost-normal glycemic control. In patients with later onset, moderate glycemic control prevents most end-stage complications caused by microvascular disease. These results have important implications for informing patients and allocating health care resources.
引用
收藏
页码:788 / +
页数:1
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] VEGF Levels in Plasma in Relation to Platelet Activation, Glycemic Control, and Microvascular Complications in Type 1 Diabetes
    Schlingemann, Reinier O.
    Van Noorden, Cornelis J. F.
    Diekman, Mattheus J. M.
    Tiller, Anna
    Meijers, Joost C. M.
    Koolwijk, Pieter
    Wiersinga, Wilmar M.
    DIABETES CARE, 2013, 36 (06) : 1629 - 1634
  • [32] Type 1 diabetes associated with other autoimmune diseases: is there any association with glycemic control and microvascular complications?
    Ana Luíza Campanholo
    Isabella Albuquerque Pinto Rebello
    Karina Tabet Munoz
    Joana Rodrigues Dantas Pereira
    Marcus Miranda dos Santos Oliveira
    Lenita Zajdenverg
    Melanie Rodacki
    Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome, 7 (Suppl 1):
  • [33] Ferritin levels in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes mellitus: relationship with microvascular complications and glycemic control
    Metwalley, Kotb Abbass
    Raafat, Duaa Mohamed
    Tamer, Deiaaeldin Mohammed
    Farghaly, Hekma Saad
    Said, Ghada Mohamed
    ARCHIVES OF ENDOCRINOLOGY METABOLISM, 2020, 64 (06): : 720 - 725
  • [34] Impact of diabetes distress on glycemic control and diabetic complications in type 2 diabetes mellitus
    Hye-Sun Park
    Yongin Cho
    Da Hea Seo
    Seong Hee Ahn
    Seongbin Hong
    Young Ju Suh
    Suk Chon
    Jeong-Taek Woo
    Sei Hyun Baik
    Kwan Woo Lee
    So Hun Kim
    Scientific Reports, 14
  • [35] Impact of diabetes distress on glycemic control and diabetic complications in type 2 diabetes mellitus
    Park, Hye-Sun
    Cho, Yongin
    Seo, Da Hea
    Ahn, Seong Hee
    Hong, Seongbin
    Suh, Young Ju
    Chon, Suk
    Woo, Jeong-Taek
    Baik, Sei Hyun
    Lee, Kwan Woo
    Kim, So Hun
    SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2024, 14 (01)
  • [36] Effect of Glycemic Treatment and Microvascular Complications on Menopause in Women With Type 1 Diabetes in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (DCCT/EDIC) Cohort
    Kim, Catherine
    Cleary, Patricia A.
    Cowie, Catherine C.
    Braffett, Barbara H.
    Dunn, Rodney L.
    Larkin, Mary E.
    Gatcomb, Patricia M.
    Wessells, Hunter B.
    Nathan, David M.
    Sarma, Aruna V.
    DIABETES CARE, 2014, 37 (03) : 701 - 708
  • [37] Microvascular Complications of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
    Faselis, Charles
    Katsimardou, Alexandra
    Imprialos, Konstantinos
    Deligkaris, Pavlos
    Kallistratos, Manolis
    Dimitriadis, Kiriakos
    CURRENT VASCULAR PHARMACOLOGY, 2020, 18 (02) : 117 - 124
  • [38] Association of coagulation profile with microvascular complications and glycemic control in type 2 diabetes mellitus - a study at a tertiary care center in Delhi
    Agarwal, Charu
    Bansal, Kashish
    Pujani, Mukta
    Singh, Kanika
    Chauhan, Varsha
    Rana, Deepshikha
    Lukhmana, Shveta
    HEMATOLOGY TRANSFUSION AND CELL THERAPY, 2019, 41 (01) : 31 - 36
  • [39] Association between depression with glycemic control and its complications in type 2 diabetes
    Mansori, Kamyar
    Shiravand, Narges
    Khosravi Shadmani, Fatemeh
    Moradi, Yousef
    Allahmoradi, Meisam
    Ranjbaran, Mehdi
    Ahmadi, Shiler
    Farahani, Abbas
    Samii, Kobra
    Valipour, Mehrdad
    DIABETES & METABOLIC SYNDROME-CLINICAL RESEARCH & REVIEWS, 2019, 13 (02) : 1555 - 1560
  • [40] Vascular complications of type 2 diabetes mellitus beyond the reach of glycemic control
    Demidova, T. Yu.
    DIABETES MELLITUS, 2010, 13 (03): : 111 - 116