Effect of Intensive Treatment of Diabetes on the Risk of Death or Renal Failure in NIDDM and IDDM
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes Care
- Vol. 20 (3) , 258-264
- https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.20.3.258
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To examine the effectiveness and safety of long-term intensive therapy in NIDDM and IDDM. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS In a private practice setting with a multi-disciplinary team, we compared the rates of total mortality, cardiac-specific mortality, and severe renal failure over 14 years in a cohort of 780 eligible patients, 209 patients with a longer duration of intensive therapy (median duration > 11 years, group I) and 571 patients with shorter duration of intensive therapy (median duration < 1 year, group II). A comorbidity index was used to assess the degree of prognostic risk at baseline. A comprehensive diabetes program was the therapeutic intervention. The endocrinologists and diabetes care team provided primary care, aggressive cardiovascular screening, and risk reduction. Intensive insulin therapy was used in 95.7% of group I IDDM and 66.0% of group I NIDDM patients. RESULTS The overall median HbA1c for group I was 7.3%. Compared with group II, the overall reduction in cumulative total mortality in group I was 22%. In the cohort with less severe initial comorbidity, the reduction in total mortality was 45%. We found similar reductions in renal failure rates in IDDM and in cardiac mortality in NIDDM patients on intensive insulin therapy. CONCLUSIONS This comprehensive diabetes program is associated with lowered mortality and morbidity in both IDDM and NIDDM. Intensive insulin therapy in long-term patients with NIDDM does not increase cardiac mortality. Intensive therapy is safe and effective in NIDDM within the context of a comprehensive program.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relation of Glycemic Control to Diabetic Microvascular Complications in Diabetes MellitusAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- The Pathophysiology of Diabetic Complications: How Much Does the Glucose Hypothesis Explain?Annals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- IntroductionAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1996
- Glycosylated Hemoglobin and the Risk of Microalbuminuria in Patients with Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- Diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The "common soil" hypothesisDiabetes, 1995
- Implementation of Treatment Protocols in the Diabetes Control and Complications TrialDiabetes Care, 1995
- NIDDM and its metabolic control predict coronary heart disease in elderly subjectsDiabetes, 1994
- Health care expenditures for people with diabetes mellitus, 1992.Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 1994
- Lymphocytic Infundibuloneurohypophysitis as a Cause of Central Diabetes InsipidusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- The Autopsy as a Measure of Accuracy of the Death CertificateNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985