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Does diabetes prevention translate into reduced long-term vascular complications of diabetes?

Citation
Nathan, D. M., et al. “Does Diabetes Prevention Translate Into Reduced Long-Term Vascular Complications Of Diabetes?”. Diabetologia, pp. 1319-1328.
Center University of Washington
Author David M Nathan, Peter H Bennett, Jill P Crandall, Sharon L Edelstein, Ronald B Goldberg, Steven E Kahn, William C Knowler, Kieren J Mather, Sunder Mudaliar, Trevor J Orchard, Marinella Temprosa, Neil H White, Research Group
Keywords Cardiovascular disease, cardiovascular disease risk factors, Diabetes prevention, Long-term diabetes complications, Microvascular disease, Review
Abstract

The global epidemic of type 2 diabetes has prompted numerous studies and public health efforts to reduce its development. A variety of interventions, including lifestyle modifications and pharmacological agents directed at ameliorating the major risk factors for type 2 diabetes, are of proven efficacy in reducing the development of type 2 diabetes in people with impaired glucose tolerance. While prevention of the hyperglycaemia characteristic of diabetes is arguably an important, clinically relevant outcome, a more compelling outcome with greater clinical significance is the prevention or reduction of the relatively diabetes-specific microvascular and less-specific cardiovascular disease (CVD) complications associated with diabetes. These complications cause the majority of morbidity and excess mortality associated with diabetes. Any reduction in diabetes should, logically, also reduce the occurrence of its long-term complications; however, most diabetes prevention trials have not been of sufficient duration to allow such an evaluation. The limited long-term data, largely from the Da Qing Diabetes Prevention Study (DQDPS) and the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) and their respective follow-up studies (DQDPOS and DPPOS), suggest a reduction in microvascular complications and amelioration of CVD risk factors. Only the DQDPOS and Study to Prevent Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus (STOP-NIDDM) studies have shown a reduction in CVD events and only DQDPOS has demonstrated a decrease in CVD and overall mortality. While these limited data are promising, whether diabetes prevention directly reduces complication-related morbidity and mortality remains unclear. Longer follow-up of prevention studies is needed to supplement the limited current clinical trial data, to help differentiate the effects of diabetes prevention itself from the means used to reduce diabetes development and to understand the balance among benefits, risks and costs of prevention.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Diabetologia
Volume
62
Issue
8
Number of Pages
1319-1328
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1432-0428
DOI
10.1007/s00125-019-4928-8
Alternate Journal
Diabetologia
PMID
31270584
PMCID
PMC6818092
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