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Microvascular Complications

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When a patient becomes blind or severely visually impaired ... Erective dysfunction. T2DM and complications. Ratio diagnosed / undiagnosed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Microvascular Complications


1
Microvascular Complications
  • Flemming Pociot
  • Steno Diabetes Center
  • STAR Research Course Epidemiology

2
Therapeutic failure in diabetes
  • When a patient reaches end stage renal failure
  • When a patient becomes blind or severely visually
    impaired
  • When a patient has a leg or foot amputated
  • When a patient suffers from MI or stroke

3
Screening/detection of late diabetic complications
  • Ophthalmoscopy / fundusphotography and visual
    acuity
  • Urinary albumin excretion (A/C) and
    s-creatinine
  • Blood pressure
  • Foot inspection, pulse and vibration threshold

4
Screening/detection of late diabetic complications
  • Heart ECG
  • Lipids
  • Autonomic neuropathy(beat-beat, DBP)
  • Erective dysfunction

5
T2DM and complications
  • Ratio diagnosed / undiagnosed
  • industrialized countries 1 1
  • developing countries 1 9
  • Complications at diagnosis
  • - Retinal 30-40
  • - Microalbuminuria 15-30
  • - Atherosclerosis 15-25

6
INDIA a prediction(all numbers in millions)
  • 1994 2010
  • Visual impairment 3.5 9.0
  • Blind 1.0 2.8
  • Renal insufficiency 3.0 8.0
  • Amputations ½ - 1 3 - 4

7
Retinopathy in Type 1 diabetes
  • Background retinopathy
  • Present in 90 with 15 years of diabetes
  • Maculopathy
  • Present in 25 with 25 years of diabetes
  • Proliferative retinopathy
  • Present in 50 with 25 years of diabetes

8
Prevention and treatment of diabetic retinopathy
Primary prevention BG BP Secondary
prevention BG BP Tertiary prevention Laser Vit
rectomi
9
DCCT Primary-prevention cohorte
Development of retinopathy
HbA1c 9.1
HbA1c 7.3
NEJM 1993329977
10
DCCT Secondary-intervention cohorte
Progression of retinopathy
HbA1c 9.1
HbA1c 7.3
NEJM 1993329977
11
DCCT Type 1 diabetes
10 reduction in HbA1c yields 40 reduction in
retinopathy progression
12
UKPDS (Type 2 diabetes)
  • Intervention Laser treated retinopathy
  • ? 1 HbA1c ? 37
  • ? 10/5 mm Hg ? 35

13
EUCLID Retinopathy (n354 T1D ptt, 2 years
treatment)
Odds ratio (95 CI) Progression of simplex
retinopathy 0.50 (0.28-0.89) Progression of
proliferative retinopathy 0.18 (0.04-0.82)
Chaturvedi et al. (1998) Lancet 351 28-31
14
Laser treatment of diabetic retinopathy
Rate of Severe Visual Loss
Year of Study
15
SummaryPrevention and treatment of retinopathy
  • Strict metabolic control
  • Antihypertensive treatment
  • Regular screening
  • Laser therapy
  • Surgical treatment
  • ACE- inhibition ?
  • Lipid lowering drugs?
  • Prevention of diabetic nephropathy ?

16
Cumulative incidence of proliferative retinopathy
in type 1 diabetes
17
Diabetic nephropathy
  • Diabetic nephropathy is irreversible in humans
  • No cases of recovery or cure have been reported
    in the literature
  • Once the clinical signs of nephropathy have
    become manifest, the natural course is inexorably
    progressive to death
  • The rate of progression is accelerated in the
    later stages

Kussman et al. Jama 1976
18
Clinical diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy
  • Persistent albuminuria (gt300 mg/24 h)
  • Presence of diabetic retinopathy
  • No clinical or laboratory evidence of kidney or
    the renal tract disease other than diabetic
    glomerulosclerosis

19
Progression of Diabetic Renal Diseasein Patients
with Diabetes
2000
2000
40
? GFR 2-2010
Overt nephropathy
200
200
? GFR 1-3
Albuminuria (µg/min)
Albuminuria (µg/min)
Microalbuminuria
20
20
Normoalbuminuria
? GFR 1
60
2
2
Time (Years)
Time (Years)
20
Diabetic Nephropathy
  • 40

21
Diabetic nephropathy - costs
  • Dialysis 75,000 /year
  • Transplantation 15,000 /year

22
Prevention and treatment of diabetic nephropathy
  • TYPE 1 diabetes
  • Primary prevention
  • Secondary prevention
  • Tertiary prevention
  • TYPE 2 diabetes
  • ? Progression from normo- to microalbuminuria
  • Progression from microalbuminuria to DN
  • Progression from DN to ESRD

23
Treatment modalities in normo- and hypertensive
patients with incipient and overt diabetic
nephropathy
  • Blood pressure reduction
  • ? UAE
  • T1D ACEi
  • T2D A2A
  • Improved metabolic control
  • Low protein diet ?

24
Treatment of patients with diabetes and
microalbuminuria
  • Strict metabolic control
  • Antihypertensive treatment
  • Blockade of the angiotensin system
  • ACE inhibition
  • Angiotensin II receptor blocking

25
DCCT Cumulative incidence of micro- and
macroalbuminuria (dashed line)
DCCT (1993) NEJM 329977-986
26
Should all Type 1 diabetic microalbuminuric
patients receive ACE inhibitors ? - a meta
regression analysis (n698)
  • 62 reduction in progression to nephropathy
  • 3 times ? in regression to normoalbuminuria
  • 50 reduction in UAE at 2 years
  • Preservation of GFR

Chaturvedi, Ann Intern Med, 2001
27
Primary prevention ACEI vs placebo in
normoalbuminuria
  • Risk reduction for development
  • of MA / progression in UAE
  • EUCLID 12.7 ( -2.9 to 26)
  • Ravid et al. 12.5 ( 2 to 23)
  • MICRO-HOPE 9.0 ( - 4 to 20)

28
In summary primary prevention of development of
diabetic nephropathy
  • Strict metabolic control
  • ACE inhibition
  • Lipid lowering drugs?
  • Low protein diet?

29
Microalbuminuria
  • Higher prevalence of retinopathy, neuropathy and
    foot ulcers
  • Enhanced cardiovascular morbidity
  • Enhanced all-cause mortality, especially
    cardiovascular
  • Predict development of diabetic nephropathy

30
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31
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32
The Steno Type 2 study
160 Type 2 diabetic patients with
microalbuminuria
Odds ratio of progression
  • Pharmacological Tx
  • hyperglycaemia
  • hypertension
  • dyslipidaemia
  • microalbuminuria
  • Behavior modification
  • exercise
  • diet
  • smoking

nephropathy
retinopathy
autonomic neuropathy
peripheral neuropathy
0
0,5
1
1,5
2
Favours intensive therapy
Favours standard therapy
Gæde et al, Lancet, 1999
33
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34
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35
Effective long-term antihypertensive treatment in
diabetic nephropathy
  • Reduces albuminuria
  • Reduces the rate of decline in kidney function
  • Postpones end stage renal disease
  • Improves survival

36
In summary secondary prevention of development
of diabetic nephropathy
  • Strict metabolic control
  • Antihypertensive treatment
  • ACE inhibition
  • Angiotensin receptor blockers
  • Both ?
  • Multifactorial intervention
  • Low protein diet ?

37
Start of antihypertensive treatment
38
Effect of ACE inhibition on diabetic nephropathy
in patients with Type 1 diabetes
40
Captopril
Placebo
30
Progression to death, dialysis or
transplant ()
p0.006
20
10
0
Follow-up (years)
Lewis EJ et al. N Engl J Med. 1993
39
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40
Cumulative incidence of diabetic nephropathy in
type 1 diabetes
41
In summary tertiary prevention of progression to
ESRF
  • Antihypertensive treatment
  • Reduces albuminuria
  • Reduces the rate of decline in kidney function
  • Postpones end stage renal disease
  • Improves survival
  • Strict glucose control
  • Low protein diet ?
  • Lipid lowering drugs ?
  • Stop smoking ?

42
Late diabetic complications
  • Prevention is better than cure

43
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