Title: Type 2 Diabetes
1Type 2 Diabetes
- Emily Foley, Helen Anthony and Jenny Williamson
GPST2s
2Outline of afternoon
- Knowledge test- AKT questions
- Diagnosis and explaining the diagnosis
- What to do with abnormal blood tests (case based)
- Monitoring and resources for patients
- Management- including lifestyle, risk factors,
drugs - When to consider referral and who to
- CSA case
- Re-test knowledge with answers
3AKT knowledge test
41. A patient who presents with polydipsia has a
non fasting glucose taken which is reported as
11.4 mmol/l. How should this be interpreted?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
52. An oral glucose tolerance test is performed.
Fasting sample 6.4 mmol/l, 2-hour sample 8.4
mmol/l. What is the diagnosis?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
63. After fasting overnight a patients urine
shows glucose , no ketones. How should this be
interpreted?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
74. A patient is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Following NICE guidelines, what target should be
set for the HbA1c?
- Agree target with patient but generally aim for
7 - Agree target with patient but generally aim for
6 - As low as possible
- Agree target with patient but generally aim for
6.5 - 6.5
85. A 62 year old man presents 4 weeks after
starting metformin for type 2 diabetes. His BMI
is 27.5. Despite slowly titrating the dose up to
500mg TDS he has experienced significant
diarrhoea. He has tried to reduce the dose back
down to 500mg BD but the diarrhoea persists. What
is the most appropriate action?
- Switch to pioglitazone 15mg OD
- Switch to gliclazide 40mg OD
- Start modified release metformin 500mg OD with
evening meal - Add loperamide as required
- Arrange colonoscopy
96. A 56 year old lady with a BMI of 27 is
reviewed in the diabetes clinic due to poor
glycaemic control. She is currently being treated
with gliclazide 160mg BD. Her latest bloods show
Na 139, K 4.1, Ur 8.4, Cr 170, ALT 25, GGT 33,
HbA1c 9.4. Which one of the following
medications should be added next?
- Guar gum
- Pioglitazone
- Metformin
- Acarbose
- Repaglinide
107. Which one of the following statements
regarding metformin is false?
- Does not cause hypoglycaemia
- Increases insulin sensitivity
- Decreases hepatic gluconeogenesis
- Increases endogenous insulin secretion
- Reduces GI absorption of carbohydrates
118. A 45 year old man with diabetes is reviewed.
His most recent HbA1c is 8.6. Gliclazide is
added to the metformin he already takes. What is
the minimum time period after which the HbA1c
should be repeated?
- 6 months
- 1 month
- 2 weeks
- 2 months
- 4 months
129. A 60 year old man with diabetes comes for
review. He has recently had laser therapy to
treat proliferative retinopathy. What should his
target blood pressure be?
- lt 125/75
- lt 130/80
- lt 140/85
- lt 140/90
- lt 140/80
13Part 1
- Diagnosing diabetes
- What to do with abnormal blood results
- Explaining the diagnosis
- What to tell patients and safety netting advice
- Who should be monitoring capillary blood glucose
and how often? - Useful sources of info for doctors and patients
14Diagnosis- type 2 (WHO criteria)
- If symptoms of hyperglycaemia (polyuria,
polydipsia, weight loss) a single fasting
glucose 7 or random glucose of 11.1 - If asymptomatic fasting glucose 7 or random
glucose 11.1 on two separate occasions - Do not use HbA1c for diagnosis
15How do you explain the diagnosis?
- Takes time
- You are not going to do it all in 10 mins
- Find out what patients understand
- Role of practice nurses- very important!
- What are the important messages to get across?
- Major morbidity/mortality risk with diabetes is
of cardiovascular events- start early with trying
to modify modifiable risk factors
16Safety
- Hypoglycaemia
- Monitoring and what to do with results
- Who might benefit form keto-stix?
- What about patients with dementia?
176pm blood results
- A 23 year old patient who thought she might have
a UTI drops off a urine sample- dip positive for
glucose and ketones. No answer to repeated
telephone calls. It is now 6pm on Friday.
18- A 68 year old presents with some polyuria and
polydipsia. Urine dip shows glucose and
ketones. Capillary blood glucose is 16. They are
not unwell. It is Friday pm. What options do you
have?
19- You tested a random blood glucose along with
several other tests for a 53 year old patient who
was tired all the time and could not produce a
urine sample- the result comes back at 18. It is
4pm on a Tuesday- there are no appointments left
this afternoon.
20- You test a fasting blood glucose for a 62 year
old man which comes back at 7.5. A repeat test is
6.8. Do you need to do anything about this? - A random blood glucose for TATT comes back at
8.1. Do you need to do a fasting glucose?
21Self monitoring
- Costs the NHS 100 million per year
- Need to balance benefits vs. impact on quality of
life - Patients who self monitor should be able to
interpret and act on results - Should be reviewed at least annually
- Make patients aware that changes to medications
are based on HbA1c and not CBG measurements
22Consider self monitoring in
- Those on insulin
- Those on oral hypoglycaemics who need info about
hypos - To assess impact of changes to medication/lifestyl
e - To monitor changes during intercurrent illness
- To ensure safety e.g. driving
23Useful sources of info and X-PERT
- Diabetes UK www.diabetes.org.uk - brilliant! Also
run a helpline and have info in different
languages. - www.yorkshirediabetes.com comprehensive list of
info leaflets and local services. - X-PERT patient programme- 6 weekly structured
sessions. - Community diabetes team- can be contacted by
email for advice.
24Part 2- outline
- Lifestyle modifications
- Stepwise medication options
- Insulin
- Lipids/BP
- Lifestyle considerations (driving/flying)
- When to refer
25Principles of Management
- Patient centred
- Communication is key
- Cultural needs and preferences
- Support, encouragement and continuity
- Self-monitoring glucose monitors
- Commencing insulin
26Lets begin withLifestyle
- Group education programmes
- Dietary advice and physical encouragement
- Individualised nutritional advice
- If overweight aim for 5-10 body wt loss
- Individualised target HbA1c review 2-6m until
stable, then 6m - Tight blood sugar control may not be as
beneficial as first thought
27Oral options
- (Lifestyle)
- First step.if HbA1cgt6.5 ? metformin
- Second stepmetformin plus SU
- Third stepadd in Insulin UNLESS.
- Fourth step increase insulin/add in
pioglitazone
28The Simplified NICE Guidelines Insulin is added
to current oral therapy, and does not replace it
Step 5 If HbA1Cgt7.5 Intensify Insulin
regime Alternatives add insulin if hot
already on it or consider adding glitazone
Step 4 If HbA1Cgt7.5 Add Insulin Alternatives
Sitagliptin/ glitazone/ exenatide
Step 3 If HbA1Cgt6.5 Add Sulphonylurea Alterna
tives gliptins/glitazones
Step 2 If HbA1C gt6.5 Start Metformin Alternativ
es SU
Step 1 Lifestyle interventions
29Metformin
- Increases insulin sensitivity
- S/E GI upset
- Cregt130 or eGFRlt45 caution
- Cregt150 or eGFRlt30 STOP!
- Renal/hepatic impairment
- Sulphonylurea (Gliclazide)
- Increases insulin secretion
- Used if not overweight
- If rapid response required
- Risk of hypoglycaemia
- Renal impairment
30Thiazolidinediones
- Pioglitazone / Rosiglitazone
- PPAR ? agonist - ? insulin sensitivity of
muscle and adipose tissue and ? glucagon
secretion - Cautions oedema,
- CCF, anaemia, wt gain
- predisposition to s
- Check LFTs
31Drug class Examples Mode of action Side Effects
Biguanides Metformin ?insulin sensitivity Rarely lactic acidosis, GI upset
Sulphonylurea Gliclazide Glibenclamide ?insulin secretion, ?peripheral resistance Risk of hypos Weight gain
Thiazolidinediones Rosiglitazone Pioglitazone ? peripheral insulin sensitivity Weight gain, CCF, s, anaemia
DPP-4 inhibitors Sitagliptin Vildagliptin Ongoing GLP-1 effects Weight neutral
GLP-1 mimetic GLP-1 analogue Exenatide Liraglutide ? insulin secretion Nausea/Vomiting Pancreatitis
In essence exanetide if very overweight,
gliptins if cant think of anything else, never
try glitazones!!!
32(No Transcript)
33Prescribing
- DPP-4 Inhibitors
- Sitagliptin / vildagliptin
- gt0.5 drop in 6m ? if not STOP!
- Consider if wt gain will be problematic
- Thiazolidinidiones
- Pioglitazone Wt gain (CCF/ risk)
- gt0.5 drop in 6m ? if not STOP!
- Consider if marked insulin insensitivity
34Prescribing
- Exanetide
- HGV
- gt1 HbA1c and gt3 BW loss in 6/12 otherwise
STOP! - Preferable if BMIgt35, or lt35 with health problems
- Acarbose
- Last resort!! cant tolerate any oral meds
35Insulin
- If oral explored and HbA1c gt7.5
- First line..human insulin o.n. or b.d. (or long
acting if lifestyle erratic) - Second line.pre-mixed short acting insulin
36- Third line....bd biphasic pre-mixed insulin (gt9)
- Last resortlong acting insulin if not reaching
targets - monitor the basal insulins for need for
short acting pre-meals - If unacceptable sitagliptin/exanatide/glitazone
37Further Management-annual review
- Lipid management
- 20 / 10 yr risk
- Simvastatin 40mg ? 80mg
- Target TClt4, LDLlt2
- Consider fibrate (TG gt4.5 despite statin)
- Anti-thrombotic treatment stop aspirin
- gt50yrs high BP 75mg aspirin
- lt50yrs significant RFs 75mg aspirin
38BP Management
- If target organ damage BPlt130/80
- Otherwise BPlt140/80
- If normotensive annual r/v
- ACE-I
- Add C or D (if pregnant give C alone)
- Add other
- Add alpha/beta/spironolactone
39Target Organs
- 1.Kidneys
- Annual ACR/Cre/eGFR
- If EOD ACE-I and dose titrate
- 2.Eyes
- Annual retinal screening
- 3.Neuropathic Pain Management (new)
- 4.Others ED, gastroparesis and depression
40Lifestyle limitations
- Driving
- Group 1 driver no limitations
- Group 2 unable to drive if on insulin
- Laser phototherapy contact DVLA
- Flying
- No limitations sensible dose reduction with
hours lost - Occupations IDDM
- Army, pilot, HGV , Navy, Police, Fireman, Postie!
41In summary
- Lifestyle
- Metformin
- SU
- Insulin
- If overweight try exanetide
- If a bit clueless try a gliptin
- Never opt for a glitazone!
- Involve MDT at earliest opportunity
42When to refer
- Motivated patients- for education and X-pert, or
if dietician input likely to help- eg jigsaw - Consider early referral to community MDT for any
patient- early good education could prevent
longterm problems - Patients who are not tolerating many medications
eg due to side effects/renal function etc - If you are considering a new medication you are
not familiar with - ? Patients you are concerned about
safety/compliance- may benefit from MDT approach - Patients with lots of hypos and erratic BMs/high
hBA1c - Those in whom you are not sure where to go now!
-
43How to refer
- Through choose and book
- See Leeds Health Pathways
- Email Elizabeth Mowatt
44CSA practice
45AKT questions
461. A patient who presents with polydipsia has a
non fasting glucose taken which is reported as
11.4 mmol/l. How should this be interpreted?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
472. An oral glucose tolerance test is performed.
Fasting sample 6.4 mmol/l, 2-hour sample 8.4
mmol/l. What is the diagnosis?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
483. After fasting overnight a patients urine
shows glucose , no ketones. How should this be
interpreted?
- Normal
- Diabetes mellitus
- Impaired fasting glucose
- Impaired glucose tolerance
- Suggests diabetes but further testing needed
- Impaired fasting glucose and impaired glucose
tolerance
494. A patient is diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.
Following NICE guidelines, what target should be
set for the HbA1c?
- Agree target with patient but generally aim for
7 - Agree target with patient but generally aim for
6 - As low as possible
- Agree target with patient but generally aim for
6.5 - 6.5
505. A 62 year old man presents 4 weeks after
starting metformin for type 2 diabetes. His BMI
is 27.5. Despite slowly titrating the dose up to
500mg TDS he has experienced significant
diarrhoea. He has tried to reduce the dose back
down to 500mg BD but the diarrhoea persists. What
is the most appropriate action?
- Switch to pioglitazone 15mg OD
- Switch to gliclazide 40mg OD
- Start modified release metformin 500mg OD with
evening meal - Add loperamide as required
- Arrange colonoscopy
516. A 56 year old lady with a BMI of 27 is
reviewed in the diabetes clinic due to poor
glycaemic control. She is currently being treated
with gliclazide 160mg BD. Her latest bloods show
Na 139, K 4.1, Ur 8.4, Cr 170, ALT 25, GGT 33,
HbA1c 9.4. Which one of the following
medications should be added next?
- Guar gum
- Pioglitazone
- Metformin
- Acarbose
- Repaglinide
527. Which one of the following statements
regarding metformin is false?
- Does not cause hypoglycaemia
- Increases insulin sensitivity
- Decreases hepatic gluconeogenesis
- Increases endogenous insulin secretion
- Reduces GI absorption of carbohydrates
538. A 45 year old man with diabetes is reviewed.
His most recent HbA1c is 8.6. Gliclazide is
added to the metformin he already takes. What is
the minimum time period after which the HbA1c
should be repeated?
- 6 months
- 1 month
- 2 weeks
- 2 months
- 4 months
549. A 60 year old man with diabetes comes for
review. He has recently had laser therapy to
treat proliferative retinopathy. What should his
target blood pressure be?
- lt 125/75
- lt 130/80
- lt 140/85
- lt 140/90
- lt 140/80
55The End