Title: The Importance of Glycemic Control, the Potential Benefits
1The Importance of Glycemic Control, the Potential
Benefits of New Technologies, and the Need for
Additional Research in Medicare
Populations Presentation to the Medicare Coverage
Advisory Committee Aaron Kowalski Ph.D. Director,
Strategic Research Projects Juvenile Diabetes
Research Foundation (JDRF) August 30, 2006
2About JDRF
- JDRFs mission to find a cure for diabetes and
its complications through research - JDRF is the leading charitable funder of type 1
diabetes research worldwide (140 million a year)
- JDRF was founded in 1970 by the parents of
children with type 1 diabetes, and JDRF's
volunteers -- who have a personal connection to
the disease -- are the driving force behind
JDRF's commitment
3Tight Glycemic Control is the Recommended
Standard of Care
- American Diabetes Association (ADA) (ADA, 2006.)
- Glycemic control is fundamental to the management
of diabetes - The HbA1c (A1c) goal for patients in general is
an A1c goal of lt7 - The goal of therapy is to achieve an A1c as close
to normal as possible (representing normal
fasting and postprandial glucose concentrations)
in the absence of hypoglycemia - American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists
(AACE) (AACE, 2002) - A1c level of 6.5 or less
- The threat of hypoglycemia can often be minimized
with more frequent blood glucose monitoring - American Geriatrics Society Panel for Improving
Care for Elders with Diabetes (Brown et al.,
2003) - A1c lt7 for those with good functional status
- 8 for frail older adults, those with life
expectancies less than 5 years and in whom the
risks of tight control outweigh the benefits
4Hemoglobin A1c Levels are Elevated in the United
States and Appear to Have Plateaued
- Reported at Diabetes Mellitus Interagency
Coordinating Committee (DMICC) (DMICC, 2005) - CDC NHANES III Mean A1c 7.7, NHANES II Mean
A1c 7.6, 60 gt7.0 - Kaiser TRIAD A1cs have stayed the same or
declined slightly over the past 10 years - VA 59 of people with diabetes above A1c 7.0
- Summary Many factors, but tools may be
suboptimal for reducing A1c below 7.0
5Hyperglycemia Causes Complications in Type 1 and
Type 2 Diabetes
- Lower A1c confers significantly reduced risk of
microvascular and macrovascular complications - Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT)
Type 1 (Diabetes Control and Complications Trial
Research Group, 1993) - Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and
Complications (EDIC) Type 1 (DCCT/EDIC Research
Group, 2000, Nathan et al., 2005) - UK Prospective Diabetes Trial (UKPDS) Type 2
(UKPDS Group, 1998) - Benefits were realized in as soon as three years
6There are Common Pathways in Diabetes
Complications
Peripheral Autonomic Neuropathy
Glucose
Polyol Pathway
Hexosamine Pathway
AGE Formation
Oxidative Stress
Cellular Dysfunction
ROS
ROS
Vascular Damage
Nephropathy
Cell Damage
Retinopathy
Different complications (eye, kidney, nerve,
blood vessels) arise from limited number of
triggers perturbing a limited number of metabolic
pathway(s) (Brownlee, 2001)
7Hypoglycemia Remains a Significant Burden
- Hypoglycemia
- Is a real obstacle to tight glycemic control
(Report from the American Diabetes Association
Workgroup on Hypoglycemia, 2005, Cryer et al.,
2003) - Is a source of significant morbidity in older
adults with diabetes (Kennedy et al., 2002) - Elderly are at increased risk for hypoglycemic
coma (Ben-ami et al., 1999) - Elderly have reduced awareness of the autonomoic
symptoms of hypoglycemia (Meneilly et al., 1994)
8Significant Glycemic Variability is Found in both
Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes
- Type 1 Patients (Bode et al., 2005)
- 9.6 (2.3 hours) hypoglycemic
- 30 (7.2 hours) hyperglycemic
- Type 2 Patients (Bode et al., 2005)
- 4.2 (1.0 hours) hypoglycemic
- 28.7 (6.9 hours) hyperglycemic
9Variability May Exacerbate Complications Pathways
- Intensive management may reduce risk of
developing complications by both reducing A1c and
by reducing variability (Brownlee and Hirsch,
2006) - Monnier et al.(2006)
- Type 2 Patients Mean Age 63.6
- Mean A1c 9.6
- Acute Glucose Swings Activate Oxidative Stress
Pathways
10Tight Glycemic Control Improves Outcomes for all
People with Diabetes the Young and the Elderly
- Lower A1c equals
- Less blindness, less renal failure, fewer
amputations, fewer strokes, fewer heart attacks - And continues to be critical in the elderly
- Increased survival for those on dialysis (Oomichi
et al., 2006) - Decreased post-operative morbidity (Ben Ami et
al., 1999) - Prevents progression of retinopathy (Morisaki et
al., 1994) - Prolonged hospitalization with exacerbated
congestive heart failure (Bhatia et al., 2004) - Better cognitive function (Meneilly et al., 1993,
Gradman et al., 1993)
11Better Glycemic Control Increases Survival for
People with Diabetes on Dialysis
(Oomichi et al., 2006)
12Better Glycemic Control Reduces Post-Operative
Morbidity in Elderly People with Diabetes
- Dronge et al., 2006
- Median age 71 years
- Primary outcomes infectious complications,
including pneumonia, wound infection, urinary
tract infection, or sepsis - CONCLUSION Good preoperative glycemic control
(A1c levels lt7) is associated with a decrease in
infectious complications across a variety of
surgical procedures
13Better Glycemic Control Reduces Hospitalization
Time for Elderly People with Diabetes and CHF
- Bhatia et al., 2004
- Patients with diabetes admitted to a tertiary
care center with exacerbation of Congestive Heart
Failure (CHF) - Mean Age 76.5
- In-hospital glycemic control strongly correlated
positively with the number of days of
hospitalization - Admission blood glucose level also showed a
strong positive correlation with the days of
hospitalization - Mean hemoglobin A1c correlated positively with
the number of days in the hospital - 51 patients with uncontrolled diabetes (A1c gt7)
were hospitalized for a mean period of 6.3 /-
3.2 days, in comparison with a mean duration of
3.2 /- 1.9 days for the 49 patients with good
outpatient glycemic control (A1c lt or 7)
14Better Glycemic Control Prevents the Progression
of Retinopathy in Elderly People with Diabetes
- Morisaki et al., 1994
- Non-insulin-dependent patients with diabetes 60
years of age - The progression rates of retinopathy as a
function of the mean A1c during the follow-up
were as follows lower than 7, 2 7-8, 20
8-9, 40 more than 9, 61 - Only A1c was a significant risk factor for
progression of retinopathy - CONCLUSIONS Control of diabetes mellitus is the
most important factor associated with prevention
of progression of retinopathy in elderly patients
15Better Glycemic Control Improves Cognitive
Function in Elderly People with Diabetes
- Meneilly et al.,1993 Improved glycemic control
in the elderly patient with NIDDM may have
beneficial effects on selective areas of
cognition - Gradman et al., 1993 Verbal learning and memory
may improve with improved glycemic control
16New Technologies Hold Potential to Improve Control
- Continuous Glucose Sensors Show Considerable
Promise in Preliminary Studies(Presentations 2005
and 2005, Garg et al. 2006, Bailey et al., 2006) - Preliminary Studies have shown
- Statistically significant reductions in A1c
(Presentations 2005 and 2005, and Bailey et al.,
2006) - Statistically significant reductions in
hypoglycemia (Garg et al., 2006) - Statistically significant increase in time spent
in target range (Garg et al., 2006A-B) - Benefits in both type 1 and type 2 patients
young and adults (Garg et al. 2006A-B, Bailey et
al. 2006)
17New Technologies Provide Additional Information
- Provide both point-in-time and glucose trends
- Alarm at hyper and hypoglycemic thresholds
- Tells people with diabetes whether their glucose
level is trending upwards or downwards, allowing
them to adjust their insulin, diet and exercise
to prevent highs and lows
18JDRF Plans Prospective Studies in Elderly
- The JDRF Artificial Pancreas Project
- Aims to close the loop tying insulin delivery
to continuous glucose sensing - Aims to bring new technologies to people with
diabetes that will improve glycemic control and
diabetes outcomes - Plans to fund outcome-based continuous sensor
trial in over 65 patients with IDDM - Would like feedback on outcome prioritization
19Potential JDRF Studies will Examine Diabetes
Outcomes in Over 65 patients
- Randomized controlled trial
- Primary outcomes of A1c and Hypoglycemia
- Secondary outcomes of quality of life, glycemic
variability, time in target - Economic analysis i.e. fewer hospitalizations,
reduced morbidity - JDRF-funded Independent
20References
- American Diabetes Association. Standards of
medical care in diabetes -2006. Diabetes Care.
2006 29 Suppl 1S4-42. - Bailey T., Kaplan R., Schwartz S. Reduction in
A1c with Real-Time Continuous Glucose Monitoring
Interim Results from a 12-Week Clinical Study.
ADA Late breaking Abstract 1-LB. 2006 Annual
Scientific Sessions. - Ben-Ami H, Nagachandran P, Mendelson A et al.
Drug-induced hypoglycemic coma in 102 diabetic
patients. Arch Intern Med 1999 159 281284. - Bhatia V, Wilding GE, Dhindsa G, Bhatia R, Garg
RK, Bonner AJ, Dhindsa S. Association of poor
glycemic control with prolonged hospital stay in
patients with diabetes admitted with exacerbation
of congestive heart failure. Endocr Pract. 2004
10 467-71. - Bode BW, Schwartz S, Stubbs HA, Block JE.
Glycemic characteristics in continuously
monitored patients with type 1 and type 2
diabetes normative values. Diabetes Care. 2005
28 2361-6. - Brown AF, Mangione CM, Saliba D, Sarkisian CA
California Healthcare Foundation/American
Geriatrics Society Panel on Improving Care for
Elders with Diabetes. Guidelines for improving
the care of the older person with diabetes
mellitus. J Am Geriatr Soc. 2003 51(5 Suppl
Guidelines) S265-80. - Brownlee M. Biochemistry and molecular cell
biology of diabetic complications. Nature. 2001
414 813-20. - Brownlee M, Hirsch IB. Glycemic variability a
hemoglobin A1c-independent risk factor for
diabetic Complications. JAMA. 2006 295 1707-8. - Cryer P, Davis SN, and Shamoon, H.,.
Hypoglycemia in Diabetes, Diabetes Care. 2003
26 1902-12.
21References
- Diabetes Control and Complications Trial Research
Group. The effect of intensive treatment of
diabetes on the development and progression of
long-term complications in insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus. N Engl J Med 1993 329
977-986. - Diabetes Control and Complications
Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and
Complications Research Group. Retinopathy and
nephropathy in patients with type 1 diabetes four
years after a trial of intensive therapy. N Engl
J Med 2000 342 381-389. - DMICC HbA1c, Diabetes and Public Health December
12, 2005 Summary Minutes. http//www.niddk.nih.gov
/federal/dmicc/2005/12-12-05/summary.pdf - Dronge AS, Perkal MF, Kancir S, Concato J, Aslan
M, Rosenthal RA. Long-term glycemic control and
postoperative infectious complications. Arch
Surg. 2006 141 375-80. - Garg S., Zisser H., Jovanovic L. Improvement in
Glucose Excursions Using a Seven-Day Continuous
Glucose Sensor Managing the Extremes. Abstract
Number 393-P. ADA Annual Scientific Sessions.
2006. - Garg S, Zisser H, Schwartz S, et. al.
Improvement in Glycemic Excursions With a
Transcutaneous, Real-Time Continuous Glucose
Sensor A randomized controlled trial, Diabetes
Care. 2006 29 44-50. - Gradman TJ, Laws A, Thompson LW, Reaven GM
Verbal learning and/or memory improves with
glycemic control in older subjects with
non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus. J Am
Geriatr Soc. 1993 41 1305-12. - Kennedy RL et al. Accidents in patients with
insulin-treated diabetes increased risk of
low-impact falls but not motor vehicle crashes- a
prospective register-based study. J Trauma.
2002 52 660-6. - Meneilly GS, Cheung E, Tessier D, Yakura C,
Tuokko H The effect of improved glycemic control
on cognitive functions in the elderly patient
with diabetes. J Gerontol. 1993 48 M117-21. - Meneilly GS, Cheung E, Tuokko H. Altered
responses to hypoglycemia of healthy elderly
people. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 1994 78 1341-8.
22References
- Monnier L, Mas E, Ginet C, Michel F, Villon L,
Cristol JP, Colette C. Activation of oxidative
stress by acute glucose fluctuations compared
with sustained chronic hyperglycemia in patients
with type 2 diabetes. JAMA. 2006 295 1681-7. - Morisaki N, Watanabe S, Kobayashi J, Kanzaki T,
Takahashi K, Yokote K, Tezuka M, Tashiro J,
Inadera H, Saito Y, et al. Diabetic control and
progression of retinopathy in elderly patients
five-year follow-up study. J Am Geriatr Soc.
1994 42 142-5. - Nathan DM, Cleary PA, Backlund JY, Genuth SM,
Lachin JM, Orchard TJ, Raskin P, Zinman B
Diabetes Control and Complications
Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes. Interventions and
Complications (DCCT/EDIC) Study Research Group.
Intensive diabetes treatment and cardiovascular
disease in patients with type 1 diabetes N Engl J
Med. 2005 353 2643-53. - Oomichi T, Emoto M, Tabata T, Morioka T,
Tsujimoto Y, Tahara H, Shoji T, Nishizawa Y.
Impact of glycemic control on survival of
diabetic patients on chronic regular
hemodialysis a 7-year observational study.
Diabetes Care. 2006 29 1496-500. - Presentations at the 9-05 EASD meeting in Athens,
Greece and the 11-05 Diabetes Technology Meeting
in San Francisco. - Report from the American Diabetes Association
Workgroup on Hypoglycemia, 2005. Diabetes Care
28 1245-9. - The American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists Medical Guidelines for the
Management of Diabetes MellitusThe AACE System
of Intensive Diabetes Self-Management2002
Update. Endocrine Practice. 2002 Vol. 8 (Suppl.
1). - UKPDS Group. Intensive blood glucose control with
sulphonylureas or insulin compared with
conventional treatment and risk for complications
in patients with type 2 diabetes. Lancet. 1998
352 837-853.