19 research outputs found
Regional socioeconomic deprivation associated with the use of sodiumâglucose cotransporterâ2 inhibitors and glucagonâlike peptideâ1 receptor agonists in adults with type 2 diabetes in Germany
German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD
An evaluation of the effectiveness of a multi-modal intervention in frail and pre-frail older people with type 2 diabetes--the MID-Frail study: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
Incluye 2 ficheros de datosBackground: Diabetes, a highly prevalent, chronic disease, is associated with increasing frailty and functional decline in older people, with concomitant personal, social, and public health implications. We describe the rationale and methods of the multi-modal intervention in diabetes in frailty (MID-Frail) study.
Methods/Design: The MID-Frail study is an open, randomised, multicentre study, with random allocation by clusters (each trial site) to a usual care group or an intervention group. A total of 1,718 subjects will be randomised with each site enrolling on average 14 or 15 subjects. The primary objective of the study is to evaluate, in comparison with usual clinical practice, the effectiveness of a multi-modal intervention (specific clinical targets, education, diet, and resistance training exercise) in frail and pre-frail subjects aged â„70 years with type 2 diabetes in terms of the difference in function 2 years post-randomisation. Difference in function will be measured by changes in a summary ordinal score on the short physical performance battery (SPPB) of at least one point. Secondary outcomes include daily activities, economic evaluation, and quality of life.
Discussion: The MID-Frail study will provide evidence on the clinical, functional, social, and economic impact of a multi-modal approach in frail and pre-frail older people with type 2 diabetes.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01654341.This study was funded by the European Commission Seventh Framework Programme
Effectiveness of a multimodal intervention in functionally impaired older people with type 2 diabetes mellitus
Background: Type 2 diabetes, a highly prevalent chronic disease, is associated with increasing frailty and functional decline in older people. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of a multimodal intervention on functional performance in frail and pre-frail participants aged >= 70 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Methods: The MID-Frail study was a cluster-randomized multicenter clinical trial conducted in 74 trial sites across seven European countries. The trial recruited 964 participants who were aged >70 years [mean age in intervention group, 78.4 (SD 5.6) years, 49.2% male and 77.6 (SD 5.29) years, 52.4% male in usual care group], with type diabetes mellitus and determined to be frail or pre-frail using Fried's frailty phenotype. Participants were allocated by trial site to follow either usual care (UCG) or intervention procedures (IG). Intervention group participants received a multimodal intervention composed of (i) an individualized and progressive resistance exercise programme for 16 weeks; (ii) a structured diabetes and nutritional educational programme over seven sessions; and (iii) Investigator-linked training to ensure optimal diabetes care. Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) scores were used to assess change in functional performance at 12 months between the groups. An analysis of the cost-effectiveness of the intervention was undertaken using the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER). Secondary outcomes included mortality, hospitalization, institutionalization, quality of life, burden on caregivers, the frequency and severity of hypoglycaemia episodes, and the cost-effectiveness of the intervention.
Results: After 12 months, IG participants had mean SPPB scores 0.85 points higher than those in the UCG (95% CI, 0.44 to 1.26, P < 0.0001). Dropouts were higher in frail participants and in the intervention group, but significant differences in SPPB between treatment groups remained consistent after sensitivity analysis. Estimates suggest a mean saving following intervention of 428.02 EUR (2016) per patient per year, with ICER analysis indicating a consistent benefit of the described health care intervention over usual care. No statistically significant differences between groups were detected in any of the other secondary outcomes.
Conclusions: We have demonstrated that a 12 month structured multimodal intervention programme across several clinical settings in different European countries leads to a clinically relevant and cost-effective improvement in the functional status of older frail and pre-frail participants with type 2 diabetes mellitus
Importance of chromium, copper, selenium and zinc in diabetes mellitus type 1 and type 2 with late disease
Chromaktiviert die Wirkung von Insulin. Bei Typ-1- undTyp-2-Diabetikern reflektierten verminderte Chromgehalte in Leukozyten eine verminderte Chromversorgung. Je schlechter die Diabeteseinstellung, umso niedriger ward er Chromstatus bei Typ-2-Diabetikern. Daher sollte bei diesen Patienten â besonders bei Typ-2-Diabetikern mit schlechter Einstellbarkeit â eine Chromsupplementation erwogen werden, wenn eine sichere Bestimmung der Chromversorgung nicht gewĂ€hrleistet ist. Kupferionenbesitzen anti- und auch prooxidative Eigenschaften. Hohe Kupferplasmawerte korrelieren mit der Entstehung einer Arteriosklerose. Die Kupferkonzentrationen im Plasma waren bei beiden Diabetikergruppen erhöht, weitererhöhte Werte zeigten Typ-2-Diabetiker mit HyperlipidĂ€mie oder diabetischen Folgeerkrankungen. Um das Risiko fĂŒr Mikro- und Makroangiopathie oder Nephropathie zu vermindern, sollten Diabetiker eine hohe Kupferzufuhr vermeiden. Selen wirkt antioxidativ, immunstimulierend und antiatherogen. Der Selengehalt im Plasma reflektiert die Selenzufuhr. Die Selenplasmawerte waren bei beiden Diabetesgruppen geringfĂŒgig vermindert und auffĂ€llig vermindert bei Patienten mit Folgeerkrankungen. Eine selenreiche ErnĂ€hrung oder Selengaben zur PrĂ€vention von SpĂ€tfolgen könnten bei Diabetikern daher sinnvoll sein. Patienten mit Nephropathie und eingeschrĂ€nkter Zufuhr an tierischem, selen- und zinkreichem Protein profitieren möglicherweise von einer Selensupplementation. Zink ist an der Wundheilung, der Immunfunktion und der Aktivierung und Speicherung von Insulin beteiligt. Der Elementgehalt war beiTyp-1-Diabetikern in Leukozyten, dem bestem Indikator der Zinkversorgung, vermindert. Bei Patienten mit Nephropathie, Mikroangiopathie oder Neuropathie war das Zinkdefizit noch deutlicher ausgeprĂ€gt. Eine hochwertige, proteinreiche ErnĂ€hrung könnte die Versorgungslage ver-bessern, auch eine Zinksupplementation wĂ€re möglicherweise von Nutzen.Chromium activates the effect of insulin. A decreased chromium content in leucocytes reflected a reduced chromium supply in diabetics type 1 and type 2. The poorer the metabolic control of diabetics type 2, the lower was the chromium status. Thus these patients â especially type 2 diabetics with metabolic disorders â should consider a chromium supplementation, especially if an accurate determination of the chromium status is not guaranteed. Copper ions have anti- and prooxidative properties. High copper values in plasma correlate with the development of arteriosclerosis. The copper concentrations in plasma were increased in both diabetic groups, further pronounced increases were found in type 2 diabetics with hyperlipidemia or late disease. In order to lower the risk of developing vascular disease or nephropathy, diabetics should avoid a high copper intake. Selenium has antioxidative, immune stimulating and antiatherogenic properties. The selenium content in plasma reflects the intake of the element. The selenium concentrations in plasma were slightly decreased in both diabetic groups and markedly decreased in patients with late disease. A selenium-rich diet or a selenium supplementation could be useful in the prevention of late disease in diabetics. Patients with nephropathy and a restricted intake of selenium- and zinc-rich animal protein possibly profit from selenium supplementation. Zinc is involved in wound healing, immune function and activation and storage of insulin. The content of the element in leucocytes is the best indicator of the zinc supply. It was decreased in type 1 diabetics. In patients with nephropathy, microangiopathy or neuropathy, the deficiency of zinc was still more pronounced. A high-quality, proteinrich diet could improve the supply with zinc; possibly, a supplementation of the element may also be useful
Evidence gap on antihyperglycemic pharmacotherapy in frail older adults : AÂ systematic review.
BACKGROUND
Although antihyperglycemic pharmacotherapy in frail older adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is challenging, recommendations from international guidelines are mainly based on indirect evidence from trials not including frail participants.
OBJECTIVE
This systematic review investigated the effectiveness and safety of pharmacotherapy in frail older adults with T2DM.
MATERIAL AND METHODS
Randomized (RCT) and non-randomized prospective clinical trials (non-RCT) were searched in three electronic databases (Medline, Embase, Central) up to October 2018. Trials in older adults with T2DM who were assessed as significantly or severely impaired by defined cut-off scores of assessment instruments on frailty, activities of daily living or physical functional impairment were included.
RESULTS
Two reviewers independently screened 17,391 references for inclusion and assessed risk of bias with ROBINSâI. Five non-RCTs and no RCT were identified. Treatment of T2DM without insulin compared to insulin could be associated with increased improvement in cardiac functions in patients with cardiac resynchronization therapy and with decreased falls in frail older women. While better glycemic control with low variability and low HbA1c (hemoglobin A1c) values (<7%) was associated with better maintenance of physical function in community-dwelling older persons, higher HbA1c values (8-8.9%) were associated with a reduction in the composite outcome of death or functional decline in community-dwelling diabetic older adults with need for skilled assistance. Due to serious risk of bias in all studies, results should be considered with caution.
CONCLUSION
Well-designed, large-scale RCTs including this important group of patients are required to assess the effectiveness and safety of pharmacotherapy and HbA1c targets
Comparison of MDRD, CKD-EPI, and Cockcroft-Gault equation in relation to measured glomerular filtration rate among a large cohort with diabetes
Aims: To analyze the performance of Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD), Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI), Cockcroft-Gault (CG), and CG calculated with ideal bodyweight (CG-IBW) equations to estimate glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) based on serum creatinine in a large diabetic population.
Methods: 24,516 adults with type-1-diabetes or type-2-diabetes from the multicenter diabetes prospective follow-up registry DPV were analyzed. We compared eGFR and measured GFR (mGFR) based on 24-h urine collection by calculating mean bias (difference), precision (SD of this difference), accuracy (proportion of eGFR within ±10% of mGFR), Bland-Altman-plots.
Results: CG overestimates, whereas MDRD, CKD-EPI, and CG-IBW underestimate. Smallest mean bias and highest accuracy (75.3%) were observed for MDRD compared to the other equations (p<0.0001). MDRD and CKD-EPI estimated most accurately in stages 1 (MDRD:57.7%, CKD-EPI:57.3%) and 2 (MDRD:80.2%, CKD-EPI:80.7%). In stages 3 to 5, highest accuracy was observed for the MDRD (stage3:82.3%, stage4:77.8%, stage5:71.0%). Among younger subjects, accuracy was higher using the CKD-EPI (18-<40 years:63.7%, 40-<60 years:72.8%). Above age 60 years, MDRD estimated most accurately (60-<70 years:77.3%, â„70 years:78.8%). In males and females, MDRD estimated most accurately (males:75.3%, females:75.3%).
Conclusion: In this large diabetic cohort, smallest bias and highest accuracy were observed for the MDRD