Strict glucose control in type 1 diabetes reduces the risk of atherosclerosis,
a benefit that persists for years, according to a study published in
the June 5, 2003, issue of the "New England Journal of Medicine".
Since 1993, when the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT)
ended, researchers have known that intensive glucose control greatly
reduces the eye, nerve and kidney damage of type 1 diabetes. Now, researchers
conclude, the benefits of tight control also extend to the heart.
"Intensive control is difficult to achieve and maintain, but its benefits
are even greater than we realized," said study chair Saul Genuth of
CWRU. "The earlier intensive therapy begins and the longer it can be
maintained, the better the chances of reducing the debilitating complications
of diabetes."
The DCCT was a multi-center study that compared intensive versus conventional
management of blood glucose in 1,441 people with type 1 diabetes. Patients
on intensive treatment kept glucose levels as close to normal as possible
with at least three insulin injections a day or an insulin pump and
frequent self-monitoring of blood glucose. Intensive treatment aimed
to keep hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), which reflects average blood sugar over
two to three months, to as close to normal (6 percent) as possible.
Conventional treatment at that time consisted of one or two insulin
injections a day with daily urine or blood glucose testing.
After six and a half years of the DCCT, HbA1c levels averaged 7 percent
in the intensively treated group and 9 percent in the conventionally
treated group. When the DCCT ended, those who had been assigned to conventional
treatment were encouraged to adopt intensive control and shown how to
do it, and researchers began a long-term follow-up study of the participants,
called the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications
(EDIC) study. The DCCT could not study atherosclerosis because the participants
were relatively young, and heart disease takes years to develop.
In 1994-1995 and again in 1998-2000, EDIC researchers used ultrasound
to measure the thickness of participants' carotid arteries, the two
blood vessels in the neck that carry blood from the heart to the brain.
Carotid wall thickness reflects the amount of atherosclerosis, or plaque
build-up, in the artery: the thicker the arterial wall the greater the
risk of later heart attack and stroke.
At the time of their first ultrasound, the diabetic participants' carotid
wall thickness was similar to that of non-diabetic controls matched
for age and gender. Five years later, however, the participants had
thicker arterial walls than those of the non-diabetic group. In addition,
the thickness of the carotid walls had increased less in the intensively
treated group during the five years than in the conventionally treated
group.
"This finding strongly suggests that atherosclerosis progressed more
slowly in the intensively treated group," said Dr. Genuth.
Carotid thickening was also linked to known cardiovascular risk factors
including age, higher systolic blood pressure, smoking, LDL:HDL cholesterol
ratio and urinary albumin (a measure of kidney function). After adjusting
for these factors, the study found that the differences in carotid wall
thickness between the two groups were due to the differences in blood
glucose levels during the DCCT.
"The risk of heart disease is about 10 times higher in people with
type 1 diabetes than in people without diabetes, but it was unclear
to what extent blood glucose contributed to the development of heart
disease," said David Nathan of Massachusetts General Hospital, who co-
chaired the DCCT/EDIC research group. "Now we know that intensively
controlled glucose significantly reduces the atherosclerosis underlying
heart disease just as it reduces damage to the eyes, nerves and kidneys
in people with type 1 diabetes. What's striking is that the benefits
of intensive control persisted despite a gradual rise in the HbA1c levels
of the intensively treated group during the 5 years after DCCT ended."
"For many people, diabetes is difficult to manage with today's tools.
Every new finding about the importance of blood glucose control in preventing
complications heightens our determination to foster research that results
in new therapies that take the burden off the patient," said Judith
Fradkin, director of the Diabetes, Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases
Division of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney
Diseases (NIDDK).
About 17 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. About 1 million have
type 1 diabetes. Formerly known as juvenile onset or insulin-dependent
diabetes, type 1 diabetes usually begins in children and adults under
age 30. It develops when the body's immune system attacks the insulin-producing
cells of the pancreas.
Type 2 diabetes accounts for up to 95 percent of all diabetes cases.
Most common in adults over age 40, type 2 diabetes affects 6.2 percent
of the U.S. population. It is strongly associated with obesity (more
than 80 percent of people with type 2 diabetes are overweight), inactivity,
family history of diabetes and racial or ethnic background. African-Americans,
Hispanic/Latino Americans, American Indians and some Asian Americans
and Pacific Islanders are at particularly high risk for type 2 diabetes.
The prevalence of type 2 diabetes has tripled in the last 30 years,
due in large part to the upsurge in obesity.
DCCT and EDIC were supported by the NIDDK, the National Eye Institute,
the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the
National Center for Research Resources, all components of the National
Institutes of Health under the Department of Health and Human Services.
The studies also received support from Genentech Inc., through a Cooperative
Research and Development Agreement with the NIDDK.