Disease
Risk From Diabetes Cut With Intense Therapy
Treatment Addresses
Heart And Kidney
Diabetes researchers
have found more evidence that aggressive treatment can prevent
- and sometimes reverse - the ravages of the disease, according
to a report in the New England Journal of Medicine.
Of the two new studies
reported, one adds to previous research and the other upends
prior assumptions. Both of the new studies look specifically
at type 1 diabetes. An accompanying editorial points out results
of type 1 diabetes trials can, with certain limitations, be
extended to type 2 diabetes.
Some 17 million people
in the US suffer from diabetes. Most of these people have type
2 diabetes, in which the body's ability to produce insulin is
hampered but not completely destroyed.
In the case of type
1 diabetes, which comprises about 10 percent of all cases, the
body's immune system attacks the insulin-producing cells so
the body cannot produce the essential hormone at all. Either
type of diabetes can cause blindness, kidney failure, amputations,
heart disease, and stroke.
About a decade ago,
the landmark Diabetes Control and Complications Trial
(DCCT) found people with type 1 diabetes who tightly
controlled their blood glucose levels reduced the risk of eye,
nerve, and kidney complications by 35 percent to 76 percent.
The study participants
were too young, however, to assess the affect on atherosclerosis,
or hardening of the arteries due to plaque buildup.
Preventing
Heart Disease
The new study, the
Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications
(EDIC) study, presents the good news that intensive
diabetes management can also reduce the risk of atherosclerosis
in people with type 1 diabetes.
The EDIC
trial involved 1,229 patients with type 1 diabetes who had also
been in the earlier DCCT trial. They were divided
into two groups: 611 who received conventional treatment and
618 who received intensive management.
The researchers used
ultrasound to measure the thickness of the wall of the participant's
carotid arteries at the beginning of the trial and after five
years. The carotid arteries, located in the neck, carry blood
from the heart to the brain.
"We're measuring the
innermost layer and then the next layer in," explains study
author Dr. David M. Nathan, director of the Diabetes Center
at Massachusetts General Hospital. "Those are the layers that
are characteristically affected by atherosclerosis, and it presages
the development of vascular disease."
After five years,
the thickness was significantly less in the diabetics who had
followed an aggressive glucose-management campaign during the
earlier trial.
"The group that was
treated intensively had a slower rate of progression," says
Dr. Nathan. "It appears that the advantage of therapy
aimed at keeping blood glucose levels as close to the nondiabetic
range as possible benefits not only diabetes-specific complications,
but also cardiovascular diseases."
Dr. Nathan was quick
to add that, so far, the regimen did not decrease heart attacks
or strokes.
But, the atherosclerosis
measurement is "a well-recognized surrogate marker" of disease,
and "we were able to make a difference. . . You need to apply
this therapy as early as possible, and continue to apply it."
Preventing Kidney
Disease
The second study looked
at microalbuminuria, or the presence of protein in the urine,
which is the earliest sign of kidney disease.
Until now, conventional
wisdom held that kidney disease was inevitable in people who
had microalbuminuria. The best you could do was slow the progression
of a disease that would eventually lead, in one-third of patients,
to end-stage renal disease and dialysis or a transplant.
This study has found
that diabetics can do better than just slow down the disease.
"In the early stages,
it looks like the disease process can be reversed if patients
do the optimal things," says study author Dr. Bruce Perkins,
a fellow in endocrinology at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston.
"The important finding
was that it does look like there is a mechanism where the kidney
can heal itself and, in fact, it seems to do it quite often,"
Dr. Perkins says.
The researchers looked
at 386 patients with type 1 diabetes and with microalbuminuria
that had been present for two years. The subjects were followed
for an additional six years. At the end of that time, 58 percent
of the participants no longer had any protein leakage.
"People who do reverse
tend to have the lowest blood sugars, lowest blood pressure
and, most importantly, the lowest cholesterol levels," Dr. Perkins
says. "It seems likely that aggressive treatment is necessary
to reverse microalbuminuria."
The first message,
then, is that screening is critical.
"Someone with diabetes
shouldn't allow years to go by without being screened for microalbuminuria
because if it's identified early, if we do the right things,
it can be reversed," Dr. Perkins says.
Physicians and patients
alike should perhaps also pay more attention to cholesterol
levels, including the possibility of taking cholesterol-lowering
drugs, although this should first be studied in a clinical trial,
Dr. Perkins says.
In the longer term,
the findings may help identify targets for new medications.
A priority is to figure out how the kidney manages to repair
itself even after early initial damage, Dr. Perkins says. He
and his colleagues believe a different part of the kidney's
filtering structure, the tubules, may be more central than originally
thought.
"This is a fundamentally
important thing because it changes the way we think about understanding
kidney disease and also finding treatments for it," Dr. Perkins
says.
Always consult your
physician for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization
is not responsible for the content of Internet sites.)
American
Diabetes Association
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Diabetes Education Program
National
Diabetes Information Clearinghouse
National
Institute of Diabetes & Digestive & Kidney Diseases
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Library of Medicine
Prevengamos
la diabetes tipo 2. Paso a Paso |
August 2004
Disease
Risk From Diabetes Cut With Intense Therapy
Preventing
Heart Disease
Preventing
Kidney Disease
Pre-Diabetes
a Risk for Hispanics
Online
Resources
Pre-Diabetes
a Risk for Hispanics
About 40 percent of
US adults ages 40 to 74 - millions of whom are Hispanic
or Latino - currently have pre-diabetes, a condition that
raises a person's risk of developing type 2 diabetes, heart
disease, and stroke.
To respond to this
rapidly growing problem, experts from the US Department
of Health and Human Services' National Diabetes Education Program
(NDEP) and community-based organizations from around
the country met recently at the National Council
of La Raza's (NCLR) annual conference to discuss national
and local efforts to stem the diabetes epidemic in the Hispanic
community.
"Every minute of every
day, another American develops type 2 diabetes," said Dr. Saul
Malozowski, senior advisor for Clinical Trials and Diabetes
Translation at the National Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Diseases.
"Without intervention,
one in three children born in the year 2000 will develop diabetes
in his or her lifetime," Dr. Malozowski says.
"For some of us, the
risk is even higher. If that child is Hispanic and female, she
has a one in two chance of developing diabetes in her lifetime.
We need to get the word out that type 2 diabetes prevention
is proven, possible, and powerful," he says.
While diabetes is
a growing epidemic for Hispanics, a recent landmark study found
that type 2 diabetes can be delayed or prevented in people at
risk for the disease.
The National
Diabetes Education Program (NDEP), a joint effort of
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
developed a bilingual diabetes prevention campaign in response
to the results of the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP)
clinical trial: "Prevengamos la diabetes tipo 2. Paso
a Paso" (Let's Prevent Type 2 Diabetes: Step by Step).
The campaign highlights
the study's findings that by losing a small amount of weight,
limiting fat and caloric intake, and exercising 30 minutes a
day, five days a week, participants dramatically reduced
their risk for diabetes by more than half. More than 500 Hispanics
participated in the DPP.
"With 'Paso a Paso,'
we are asking Hispanics to find out if they are at risk for
diabetes, and we're showing them how to take action to prevent
it," said Yanira Cruz, the chair of the NDEP
Hispanic/Latino Work Group.
"The key is modest
weight loss and regular physical activity," she says. "I want
to encourage people to take this message of good health to their
families and their communities, so we can put an end to the
diabetes epidemic."
José Cortez took
this message to his family and community after learning about
the success of diabetes prevention efforts by other Latinos.
Cortez, who works
for Chicanos Por La Causa, a statewide community development
corporation in Phoenix, now hikes regularly with his family,
and even coordinates an annual hike for his organization.
Cortez shared his
successes - both personally and professionally - to
spread the message of diabetes prevention.
"Chicanos Por La Causa
creates opportunities for leaders in the community," says Cortez.
"But strong leaders need to be healthy. For me, that means hiking
regularly, but for others that may mean taking a walk during
lunch or substituting fruits and vegetables for less healthy
foods. But taking the first step is always the most important."
To help Hispanics
take their first step, the NDEP is offering
a new music CD free of charge to help Hispanics get more physical
activity to prevent type 2 diabetes.
Performed by a diverse
group of Hispanic recording artists, MOVIMIENTO, Por Su Vida
(Movement, For Your Life) is a collection of six original songs
with a Latin dance beat and lyrics that celebrate life in an
effort to promote physical activity as a way to stay healthy
and help prevent diabetes.
"Everything counts -
taking the stairs, walking the dog, dancing to music, mowing
the lawn - small changes can be easily incorporated," said
Cruz. "Physical activity just needs to occur every day. Make
it fun and take it step by step!"
Always consult your
physician for more information. |