Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE

Objective: To compare results of clinical trials that assessed the impact of near-normalization of glucose on microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes. Methods: ACCORD ( N  = 10,234) and ADVANCE ( N  = 11,140) tested the hypothesis that near-normalization of glucose reduces microvascular compl...

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Main Authors: Patrick J. O’Connor, Faramarz Ismail-Beigi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-02-01
Series:Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2042018810390545
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spelling doaj-c85cbe315d014091b7dc39c2851e84682020-11-25T03:15:33ZengSAGE PublishingTherapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism2042-01882042-01962011-02-01210.1177/2042018810390545Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCEPatrick J. O’ConnorFaramarz Ismail-BeigiObjective: To compare results of clinical trials that assessed the impact of near-normalization of glucose on microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes. Methods: ACCORD ( N  = 10,234) and ADVANCE ( N  = 11,140) tested the hypothesis that near-normalization of glucose reduces microvascular complications in adults with established type 2 diabetes. Differences in incidence rates (intensive versus standard glucose control) for specific microvascular complications are expressed as ‘number needed to treat’ (NNT) to prevent one microvascular complication. The impact of blood pressure (BP) control and fenofibrate use on microvascular complications was also assessed. Results: In ADVANCE, near-normalization of glucose reduced new or worsening nephropathy (NNT = 77 for 5 years to prevent one occurrence), but not eye or foot complications. In ACCORD, near-normalization of glucose did not reduce prespecified composite measures of advanced microvascular complications, and impact on secondary microvascular outcomes was mixed. The ancillary ACCORD Eye Study found reduced progression in retinopathy with near-normalization of glucose (NNT = 32 for 4 years), and with blinded fenofibrate therapy (NNT = 27 for 4 years), but neither intervention reduced vision loss. ADVANCE showed a benefit of intensive BP control (mean BP 133/70 mmHg) on microvascular complications, independent of glucose control. Conclusions: End-stage microvascular complications were not altered by near-normalization of glucose. Some early manifestations of microvascular complications were reduced, with inconsistencies across studies in which were affected. These early and inconsistent microvascular effects must be weighed against significantly increased severe hypoglycemia, weight gain, and (in ACCORD) increased total mortality (NNT = 94 for 3.5 years for one excess death) consistently found in all prespecified patient subgroups. Alternative clinical strategies, such as moderate BP control or fenofibrate treatment may reduce microvascular complications independent of glucose control. The data strongly support personalized glucose control goals based on clinical factors and patient preferences for outcomes.https://doi.org/10.1177/2042018810390545
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick J. O’Connor
Faramarz Ismail-Beigi
spellingShingle Patrick J. O’Connor
Faramarz Ismail-Beigi
Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism
author_facet Patrick J. O’Connor
Faramarz Ismail-Beigi
author_sort Patrick J. O’Connor
title Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
title_short Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
title_full Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
title_fullStr Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
title_full_unstemmed Near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from ACCORD and ADVANCE
title_sort near-normalization of glucose and microvascular diabetes complications: data from accord and advance
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism
issn 2042-0188
2042-0196
publishDate 2011-02-01
description Objective: To compare results of clinical trials that assessed the impact of near-normalization of glucose on microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes. Methods: ACCORD ( N  = 10,234) and ADVANCE ( N  = 11,140) tested the hypothesis that near-normalization of glucose reduces microvascular complications in adults with established type 2 diabetes. Differences in incidence rates (intensive versus standard glucose control) for specific microvascular complications are expressed as ‘number needed to treat’ (NNT) to prevent one microvascular complication. The impact of blood pressure (BP) control and fenofibrate use on microvascular complications was also assessed. Results: In ADVANCE, near-normalization of glucose reduced new or worsening nephropathy (NNT = 77 for 5 years to prevent one occurrence), but not eye or foot complications. In ACCORD, near-normalization of glucose did not reduce prespecified composite measures of advanced microvascular complications, and impact on secondary microvascular outcomes was mixed. The ancillary ACCORD Eye Study found reduced progression in retinopathy with near-normalization of glucose (NNT = 32 for 4 years), and with blinded fenofibrate therapy (NNT = 27 for 4 years), but neither intervention reduced vision loss. ADVANCE showed a benefit of intensive BP control (mean BP 133/70 mmHg) on microvascular complications, independent of glucose control. Conclusions: End-stage microvascular complications were not altered by near-normalization of glucose. Some early manifestations of microvascular complications were reduced, with inconsistencies across studies in which were affected. These early and inconsistent microvascular effects must be weighed against significantly increased severe hypoglycemia, weight gain, and (in ACCORD) increased total mortality (NNT = 94 for 3.5 years for one excess death) consistently found in all prespecified patient subgroups. Alternative clinical strategies, such as moderate BP control or fenofibrate treatment may reduce microvascular complications independent of glucose control. The data strongly support personalized glucose control goals based on clinical factors and patient preferences for outcomes.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2042018810390545
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