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Use of Intensive Glycemic Management in Older Adults with Diabetes Mellitus.

Citation
Arnold, S., et al. “Use Of Intensive Glycemic Management In Older Adults With Diabetes Mellitus.”. Journal Of The American Geriatrics Society, pp. 1190-1194.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Suzanne Arnold V, Kasia J Lipska, Jingyan Wang, Leo Seman, Sanjeev N Mehta, Mikhail Kosiborod
Keywords diabetes mellitus, glucose control, hypoglycemia
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the proportion of older adults with diabetes mellitus treated with tight glucose control and the factors associated with this practice.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional analysis.

SETTING: Outpatient sites in the Diabetes Collaborative Registry (N=151).

PARTICIPANTS: Adults aged 75 and older with type 2 diabetes mellitus (N=42,669).

MEASUREMENTS: Participants were categorized based on glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and glucose-lowering medications: poor control (HbA1c >9%), moderate control (HbA1c 8-9%), conservative control (HbA1c 7-8%), tight control (HbA1c <7%) with low-risk agents (low risk for hypoglycemia), tight control with high-risk agents, and diet control (HbA1c <7% taking no glucose-lowering medications). We used hierarchical logistic regression to examine participant and site factors associated with tight control and high-risk agents versus conservative or tight control and low-risk agents.

RESULTS: Of 30,696 participants without diet-controlled diabetes, 5,596 (18%) had moderate or poor control, 9,227 (30%) had conservative control, 7,893 (26%) had tight control taking low-risk agents, and 7,980 (26%) had tight control taking high-risk agents. Older age, male sex, heart failure, chronic kidney disease, and coronary artery disease were each independently associated with greater odds of tight control with high-risk agents. There were no differences according to practice specialty (endocrinology, primary care, cardiology) in how aggressively participants were managed.

CONCLUSION: One-quarter of U.S. older adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus are tightly controlled with glucose-lowering medications that have a high risk of hypoglycemia. These results suggest potential overtreatment of a substantial proportion of people and should encourage further efforts to translate guidelines to daily practice.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society
Volume
66
Issue
6
Number of Pages
1190-1194
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1532-5415
DOI
10.1111/jgs.15335
Alternate Journal
J Am Geriatr Soc
PMID
29633237
PMCID
PMC7032960
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