Title: Managing the Patient with Diabetes
1Managing the Patient with Diabetes
- Cindy Brown, RN, MN, ANP, CDE
2Introduction
- Scope of the problem
- Number of people with Type 2 diabetes approaches
21 million - One third are as yet undiagnosed
- Typically have had the disease 7 years prior to
diagnosis
3Introduction
- Often asymptomatic or exhibit subtle signs
- Puts the patient at risk for CAD, stroke, PVD,
dyslipidemia, hypertension and obesity - UKPDS study of gt5000 showed that tight glycemic
control could reduce end-organ damage by 50-75
4Early Detection
- New guidelines released in 1997
- Lowered fasting BS from 140 mg/dL as diagnostic
to 126 mg/dL - Those with insulin resistance and/or impaired
glucose tolerance may develop complications
5Diagnostic Criteria
- Symptoms casual BS gt/ 200
- Fasting BS /gt 126 on two occasions
- BS /gt 200 at the 2-hour mark of a glucose
tolerance test
6Risk Factors
- Ethnicity African-American, Asian-American,
Hispanic, Native American, Pacific Islander - Family history in first-degree relative
- Hx GDM or a baby gt 9 pounds
- Hx FBS 110-125 mg/dL
- Hypertension
- Obesity, especially abdominal
7Pathophysiology of Type 2
- Genetic predisposition
- Abnormal beta cell function
- Impaired sensitivity of target tissues to insulin
(insulin resistance)
8Abnormal Beta Cell Function
- Becomes evident when insulin resistance develops
- During pregnancy
- Steroid therapy
- Acute illness
- Increased central obesity
9Theory Behind Treatment
- Improved lifestyle oral medications
- Delay or prevention of Type 2 diabetes
10Signs and Symptoms
- Blurred vision
- Dizziness
- Excessive thirst
- Fatigue
11Signs and Symptoms
- Frequent urination
- Nocturia
- Weight loss
- Vaginitis
12Signs and Symptoms
- Weakness
- Impotence
- Weight gain, especially around the middle
- Excessive hunger
13Insulin Resistance
- Cells resist the effect of insulin
- Downgrades insulin receptors
- Blood sugar begins to rise
- Pancreas makes more insulin to overcome the
resistance - Insulin levels rise, leading to many symptoms
14Insulin Resistance
- Weight gain around the middle
- Inability to lose weight
- Fatigue
- Carbohydrate cravings
- Hypoglycemic symptoms with prolonged hunger or
2-3 hours following a carb load
15Insulin Resistance
- Underlies many other disorders
- Type 2 diabetes
- Gestational diabetes
- Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome
- Syndrome X
- Raises risks of CAD, HTN, stroke even before
overt diabetes diagnosed - Leads to glucose intolerance
16Impaired Glucose Tolerance
- Fasting blood sugar gt110 but lt126
- 2 hour glucose .gt126 but lt200 on glucose
tolerance test - Represents step 2 on the road to diabetes
- Usually accompanied by insulin resistance
- Subset of lean persons who are not insulin
resistant really do have low insulin production
17Goals of Treatment
- Optimal glycemic control
- Hgb A1c of 6.5
- Reduction of risks
- Control of lipid levels, esp. LDL lt70
- Control of BP lt130/80
- Taking low dose aspirin
- Taking an ACE-I
18Goals of Treatment
- Aimed at both insulin deficiency insulin
resistance - Most will need oral agents very soon after
diagnosis - Purpose of all treatment is to decrease the need
for insulin
19Decline of Beta Cell Function
- Progressive despite treatment
- Single oral agent lifestyle changes has limited
success - Endogenous insulin production continues to
decrease - Secondary failure predicted for about 5 years out
20Treatment Options
- Modification of lifestyle
- Change of diet
- Increased physical activity
- Oral medications
- Injectable incretin mimetics
- Insulin
- Combination of oral and insulin
21Medical Nutritional Therapy
- Low calorie, carbohydrate controlled meal plans
- No longer a diabetic diet
- Recent research has led to realization that the
source of the carbohydrate is not as important
as the quantity - There are no bad foods
22Oral Hypoglycemic Agents
- Insulin sensitizing agents
- Biguanides
- TZDs
- Sulfonylureas
- Alpha glucosidase inhibitors
- DPP-4 Inhibitor
- Combinations
23Oral Hypoglycemic Agents
24Insulin Sensitizing Agents
- Metformin (biguanide)
- No stimulation of insulin secretion
- Increases glucose utilization
- Decreases glucose production (liver)
- Increases uptake of glucose in peripheral tissue
- Decreases GI absorption of glucose
- Has an anorexiant effect
25Metformin
- Currently available as Glucophage, Glucophage XR,
Glucovance, Fortamet , Glumetza and Riomet - Now have ActoplusMet, Avandamet, Janumet
- Has become available in generic form
26Metformin
- Advantages
- Reduction of insulin resistance
- Weight loss
- Decrease of triglycerides improvement of lipid
profile - No increase in insulin secretion
- No hypoglycemia when used as monotherapy
27Metformin
- Disadvantages
- GI side effects diarrhea, nausea, gas
- Lactic acidosis in presence of impaired renal or
liver function - Should be avoided when creatinine gt1.4 in
females, gt1.5 in males in presence of liver
dysfunction (elevated ALT/AST) or binge drinking
28Metformin
- Withhold in conditions that predispose to renal
insufficiency and/or hypoxia - Acute MI or CHF
- Shock or acute hypotension
- Severe infection
- Major surgical procedure
- Use of iodinated contrast media
- DKA
29Metformin
- Start slowly with 500 mg once daily _at_ supper
- Titrate upwards by one pill per week until taking
TID with meals - Ingested with food decreases GI side effects
increases effectiveness
30Metformin
- Max dose2550 mg/day
- Available in 500 mg, 850 mg and 1000 mg tablets
- XR formulation available in 500 mg 750 mg
tablets can take total dose once daily with
supper
31Metformin
- Glucovance a combination of glucophage and
glyburide - Good choice for newly diagnosed
- Glyburide reduces BS and smaller doses of
Glucophage easier on stomach - Available in 1.25/250, 2.5/500, 5/500
32Thiazolidinediones (TZDs)
- Enhance insulin action
- Increase glucose utilization in peripheral
tissues - May suppress gluconeogenesis
- Mediated via stimulation of PPARy - increase
expression of genes that encode for glucose
transporter proteins
33TZDs
- May exhibit lipid-lowering and anti-hypertensive
effects - Work well in combination with other oral
hypoglycemic agents - Recent animal studies suggest that they can
regenerate beta cell function
34TZDs
- Available as pioglitazone (Actos) and
rosiglitazone (Avandia) - Chemically related to troglitazone
- LFTs must be monitored q2 months first year of
therapy
35TZDs
- Advantages
- Reduction of insulin resistance
- Once-daily dosing
- No risk of hypoglycemia
- Additive effect with other agents
- Can be used with renal impairment
- Favorable lipid profile
36TZDs
- Disadvantages
- Rare risk of liver damage
- Necessity of frequent liver function monitoring
- Slower onset of action
- Possible weight gain and fluid retention
- Lower doses reduce above side effects
37TZDs
- Actos available in 15 mg, 30 mg, and 45 mg
- Avandia available in 2mg, 4mg, 8 mg
- May be dosed QD or BID
- DREAM study implies diabetes prevention
38Sulfonylureas
- Related to sulfonamide drugs
- Lower BG predominantly via stimulation of insulin
secretion - Potentiate the action of insulin in liver,
muscle, adipose tissue - Insulin levels return to pretreatment levels
after several months of treatment
39Sulfonylureas
- Second generation drugs now used over first
generation - Available as glipizide, glyburide, glimepiride
- No advantage to using two of this class
- With failure, no reason to try another of same
class
40Sulfonylureas
- Best to start at lowest dose and work up
- No advantage to exceeding max doses
- If BS not controlled at max dose, add an agent
from a different class - Major side effecthypoglycemia, esp. in elderly
with renal insufficiency, with alcohol ingestion
or skipped meals
41Secretagogues
- Stimulate insulin secretion
- Release of insulin glucose-dependent
- Effect maximized post-prandially
- Rapid onset of action
- Targets post-prandial rise of BS
- Can be used as monotherapy or in combination with
metformin
42Secretagogues
- May be used with renal insufficiency and liver
dysfunction - May cause mild-moderate hypoglycemia, nausea,
diarrhea, constipation , vomiting - Lower risk of nighttime hypoglycemia
43Alpha-glucosidase Inhibitors
- Inhibit enzymatic conversion of dietary starches
to oligosaccharides - Delay absorption of glucose from the GI tract
- Reduces post-prandial BS excursions
44Alpha-glucosidase Inhibitors
- Advantages
- Targets post-prandial BS
- No risk of hypoglycemia when used alone
- Additive effect when used with sulfonylureas
- Lack of weight gain
45Alpha-glucosidase Inhibitors
- Disadvantages
- Less potent effect on BS
- Multi-dosing
- Very high incidence of GI side effects
- Complicates treatment of hypoglycemia when used
with insulin or sulfonylureas pure glucose
effective treatment
46Alpha-glucosidase Inhibitors
- May cause elevations in liver enzymes
- May exacerbate lactose intolerance
47Incretins
- Hormone that
- Originates in GI tract
- Released during feeding
- Augments insulin secretion (beta cells)
- Some also decrease glucagon secretion (alpha
cells) - Actions are glucose dependent
48Incretins
- Effect greatly diminished in Type 2 diabetes
- Major incretins
- Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1)
- Glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide
(GIP) - Both increase insulin secretion
- Only GLP-1 suppresses glucagon secretion
- Both rapidly inactivated by DPP-4
49Incretin Mimetics
- Byetta (exenatide)
- Gut derived peptides secreted in response to
meals - Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)
- Glucose dependent stimulation of insulin
- Supression of glucagon secretion
- Delay of gastric emptying
- Promotion of satiety
50Incretin Mimetics
- Byetta
- OK to use with sulfonylureas, metformin, insulin
- Being studied with TZDs
- Promotes weight loss
- Major side effect nausea
- Increased risk of hypoglycemia with insulin use
51Incretin Mimetics
- Byetta
- Start at 5 mcg BID before breakfast and supper
- Increase to 10 mcg after one month
- Pre-filled disposable pens
- Needs refrigeration
- Appears to preserve beta cell function
52Incretin Mimetics
- Symlin (pramlintide)
- Pancreatic islet peptide secreted in response to
food - Suppresses glucagon secretion
- Delays gastric emptying
- Promotes satiety
- Use in Type 1 diabetes and Type2, insulin using
53Incretin Mimetics
- Symlin
- Given before meals along with insulin, but
separate sites - Major role decrease post-prandial glucose
excursions - Can induce weight loss
- Side-effect nausea
54Incretin Mimetics
- Symlin
- In Type 1 diabetes, start with 5 units in an
insulin syringe - Every 3-5 days without nausea, titrate dose
upward by 5 units until taking max of 20 units
TID - In Type 2 diabetes, start with 10 units, titrated
up to 40 units.
55DPP 4 Inhibitors
- Januvia (sitagliptin)
- New class of oral medications
- Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 blocker
- Inactivates gt50 GLP-1 in 1 minute
- Inactivates gt50 GIP in 7 minutes
- Blocking action of DPP-4 allows GLP-1 and GIP to
increase insulin secretion and suppress glucagon
secretion
56DPP-4 Inhibitors
- New on market Onglyza
- Very similar to Januvia
57Insulins
- Use of insulin in Type 2 diabetes growing
- Excess hepatic glucose production found in the
unfed stateelevated FBG - Glucose toxicity caused by secretion defect and
hyperglycemia - Insulin can partially reverse these processes
58Insulins
- Can counteract insulin resistance glucose
toxicity - Results in recovery of insulin secretion
improvement of postprandial glucose excursions - Preprandial injections of rapid-acting insulin
reduces postprandial BS
59Insulins
- Rapid-acting
- Lispro (Humalog)
- Onset 5-10 min
- Peak 1 hour
- Duration 2 hours
- Aspart (Novolog)
- Onset 5-10 min
- Peak 0.5-1 hour
- Duration 3-5 hours
60Insulins
- Rapid-acting
- Glulisine (Apidra)
- Onset lt30 minutes
- Peak 30-90 minutes
- Duration lt6 hours
61Insulins
- Short-acting
- Regular
- Onset 0.5-1 hour
- Peak 2-4 hours
- Duration 4-6 hours
62Insulins
- Intermediate-acting
- NPH
- Onset 1-4 hours
- Peak 4-12 hours
- Duration 14-24 hours
- Lente off US market
63Insulins
- Long-acting
- Ultralente now off US market
- Levemir
- Onset 1 hour
- Peak slight
- Duration 22-24 hours
- Less weight gain
- Lantus
- Onset 1 hour
- Peak - none
- Duration 22- 24 hours
64Insulins
- Others
- 70/30 (70 NPH/30 Reg)
- 50/50 (50 NPH/50 Reg)
- 75/25 (75 lispro protamine/25 lispro)
- U-500 Regular (concentrated)
65Insulins
- Goal is to mimic natural insulin production as
closely as possible - Long acting _at_ bedtime rapid acting before meals
mother nature
66Exercise
- Increases tissue sensitivity to insulin
- Reduces dosage of medications
- Reduces cardiovascular risk factors
- Lowers LDL
- Raises HDL
- Lowers BP
- Improves collateral flow
- Decreases central obesity
67Exercise
- Change mindset about exercise vs. physical
activity - All activity counts
- Need not be done in one session
- Can be effective even if done in chair
68Considerations in the Elderly
- Particularly susceptible to hypoglycemia,
especially with renal insufficiency - Many more co-morbidities requiring poly-pharmacy
- More risk of interactions and side-effects
- Loss of hypoglycemia awareness
- BS goals usually higher
69Considerations in the Elderly
- Good BS control aids cognition
- Medications expensive leads to choosing which
ones can be taken - Often opt for the cheapest solution
- Social isolation, depression , illness may cause
skipped meals and hypoglycemia which can lead to
personality changes, falls, car accidents
70Recommendations
- Goals
- Hgb A1c6.5 (AACE) lt7.0 (ADA)
- FBG110
- Postprandial BG lt 140
- BP lt 130/80
- Annual eye exam
- Daily aspirin
71Recommendations
- ACE inhibitor, even prior to microalbuminuria
- Lipids
- LDL lt70 (esp. with CAD)
- HDL gt45 (men) gt 50 (women)
- Triglycerides lt150
- Cholesterol lt200
72Recommendations
- Modest weight loss of 10-15 body weight brings
big results
73Medications to Avoid
- Beta-blockers may mask hypoglycemia warning
signs - Steroids markedly increase blood sugar
- HCTZ increases blood sugar
- Niacin increases insulin resistance
74Conclusion
- Type 2 diabetes difficult to control
- Treatment regimens complicated
- Good BS control takes enormous amounts of work on
a daily basis - Need all the encouragement they can get