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Study Confirms that Intensive Treatment of Diabetic
Patients
Significantly Reduces Cardiovascular Disease
Yet Another Proven Benefit of Tight Glucose Control for Those With
Type 1 Diabetes
(Philadelphia, PA) - New study results confirm, for the first time, that
intensive treatment of diabetic patients results in a significantly lower
risk of heart disease. In fact, it can cut the risk of cardiovascular
disease nearly in half. Researchers say this is yet another proven benefit
of the long-term effects of tight glucose control in patients with type
1 diabetes.
The new finding was announced on Sunday at the annual scientific meeting
of the American Diabetes Association. The results stem from studying cardiovascular
events in patients who took part in the Diabetes Control and Complications
Trial (DCCT) and a follow-up NIH study. The original DCCT results reported
in 1993 showed a 50-60 percent reduction in eye, kidney, and nerve disease.
Now researchers also know this treatment helps reduce severe cardiovascular
events.
“This is exciting news for those coping with diabetes. This intensive
treatment of glucose control could allow them to live longer with less
suffering,” said Stanley Schwartz, MD, the principal
investigator on the DCCT follow-up study, called the Epidemiology of Diabetes
Interventions and Complications (EDIC). Schwartz is also the Director
of Diabetes Disease Management for the University of Pennsylvania
Health System. “The EDIC study examined the long-term effects
of an average of 6.5 years of conventional insulin treatment versus intensive
insulin treatment.”
Schwartz adds that before, with conventional treatments, the patient would
receive 1-2 shots of insulin a day and occasional office visits and standard
dietary reminders. In intensive treatment, patients are given 3-4 shots
of insulin a day, frequent dietary reminders, monthly doctor's appointments,
and psychological support.
In results announced last Sunday, the ADA says among the more than 1,300
volunteers continuing to participate in the DCCT/EDIC study (which is
a remarkable 93% of the original volunteer base), the intensively treated
patients had a 57% reduction in the number of serious cardiovascular events
such as heart attacks and strokes -- compared to the conventionally treated
group.
According to the ADA, the risk of heart disease is about 10 times higher
in people with type 1 diabetes than in people without diabetes. About
18.2 million people in the United States have diabetes, the most common
cause of blindness, kidney failure, and amputations in adults and a major
cause of heart disease and stroke.
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