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Diabetics who intensively control their blood glucose live longer

1/6/2015

 




BETHESDA, Md. — People with type 1 diabetes who intensively control their blood glucose early in their disease are likely to live longer than those who do not, according to research funded by the National Institutes of Health released Tuesday. The findings are the latest results of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial and its follow-up, the Epidemiology of Diabetes Control and Complications study. 


 


“The outlook for people with type 1 diabetes continues to improve,” stated Catherine Cowie of NIH’s National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, the primary funder of the study. “These results show that by tightly controlling their blood glucose, people with type 1 diabetes can live longer.”


 


Type 1 diabetes typically occurs in younger people and was formerly called juvenile-onset diabetes. In type 1 diabetes, the body does not make insulin, and people with type 1 need to take daily insulin to live.


 


Results were published online Jan. 6 in the Journal of the American Medical Association.


 




 


Beginning in 1983, the DCCT/EDIC study enrolled 1,441 people between ages 13 and 39 with recent onset type 1 diabetes. In the DCCT, half were assigned at random to intensive blood glucose control designed to keep blood glucose as close to normal as safely possible, and half to the conventional treatment at the time. Both groups were similar in age. The DCCT ended in 1993 when the intensive control group was found to have substantially less eye, nerve and kidney disease. All participants were taught intensive blood glucose control and followed during the ongoing EDIC. Blood glucose control has been similar in both groups since DCCT ended.


 


Researchers found 107 deaths among DCCT/EDIC participants, who were followed an average of 27 years from enrollment. There were 64 deaths in the group that had initially received standard treatment and 43 deaths in the intensive treatment group, a 33% reduction in deaths. The most common causes of death — not all necessarily related to diabetes — were cardiovascular diseases (22%), cancer (20%), acute diabetes complications — where blood glucose became dangerously high or low (18%) — and accidents/suicide (17%).


 


More people in the conventional treatment group than the intervention group died from diabetic kidney disease (six vs. one). The study also found that higher average glucose levels and increased protein in the urine — a marker of diabetic kidney disease — were the major risk factors for death.


 


“These results build on earlier studies, which suggested that increased protein in the urine largely accounts for shorter lifespans for people with type 1 diabetes,” said the study’s lead author, Trevor Orchard, a professor at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health. “These results further emphasize the importance of good early glucose control, as this reduces the risk for increased protein in the urine in general, as well as diabetic kidney disease.”


 


Since the 1993 publication of the findings, the DCCT intensive treatment has become standard practice for type 1 diabetes. The new findings show that reductions in diabetes complications resulting from tight glucose control translate into longer lifespans.


 


“Thanks to the findings over the years from the landmark DCCT/EDIC study, millions of people with diabetes may prevent or delay debilitating and often fatal complications from the disease,” said NIDDK Director Griffin Rodgers. “NIH’s mission is to help improve lives through biomedical research. These kinds of results provide hard evidence that what we do helps people live longer, healthier lives.”


 

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