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Heart complications of diabetes can also be prevented with
intensive treatment. The
Epidemiology of
Diabetes Interventions and Complications Study (EDIC) has continued
to follow the participants in the DCCT.
EDIC investigators recently reported that intensive control
lowers the risk of heart disease and stroke by about 50 percent.
These findings underscore the importance of good control of
blood sugar in the short and long term.
Again, these findings in type 1 diabetes patients have been
replicated in type 2 diabetes patients as well, because both forms
of the disease share the same possible complications in terms of
damage to the kidneys, eyes, nerves, heart, and other organs.
The results of this trial underscore the fact that because of
pioneering research in type 1 diabetes, close
control of blood glucose levels is now a keystone to the medical
management of both forms of the disease. Moreover, this landmark
trial in type 1 diabetes also established the value of hemoglobin
A1c (HbA1c) levels -- a measurement of blood glucose levels over
time -- as an outcome measure for future clinical trials in both
type 1 and type 2 diabetes, dramatically shortening the cost and
duration of new trials of new therapies and encouraging development
of new therapies of diabetes.
The use of HbA1c as an outcome measure was the basis for approval of
improved forms of injected insulin, inhaled insulin, and several new
classes of oral drugs for type 2 diabetes, which used in combination
can delay the need for insulin therapy.
Figure adapted from N Engl J Med 353: 2643-2653, 2005.
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