Just how low should blood sugar go?

11 Feb, 2008

Conventional thinking among doctors who treat people with type 2 diabetes has been the lower the blood sugar levels, the better. Many doctors are now taking a second look.
A massive study of diabetics with a high risk of heart disease known as ACCORD has found that lowering blood sugar levels to what is considered normal for healthy people proved deadly for some, researchers said on Wednesday. Older patients who underwent intensive therapy to reach that level had higher rates of death than a group of patients in the same study who were treated more conservatively.
"The study was designed asking the question if you really control blood sugar, do you actually prevent death?" said Dr Faramarz Ismail-Beigi of the University Hospitals Case Medical Centre in Cleveland, Ohio, one of the study's researchers.
"I think in the intensive group, the answer is no. It doesn't prevent heart attacks and stroke," he said in a telephone interview. Ismail-Beigi said the study participants have answered an important question for millions of patients around the world with type 2 diabetes, a disease marked by high blood sugar that can lead to a host of complications including heart attacks and stroke.
"We know how to manage the disease safely and better at less expense," Ismail-Beigi said. He said it would have taken a huge amount of resources to move type 2 diabetics to the lower, normal blood sugar range, a measure known as hemoglobin A1c.
Patients in the intensive treatment group of the ACCORD study were aiming for an A1c level of 6 percent or below. They achieved an average of 6.4 percent, whereas the more conservative treatment group had A1c levels of about 7.5 percent.
"We can move millions of people into this zone with a certain amount of resources," Ismail-Beigi said. To move them all down to 6, you would need five to 10 times more resources. In terms of public health, it makes a huge difference."
Dr James Dove, president of the American College of Cardiology, said the study was a bit unsettling. "I think it offers some concern and caution," Dove said in a telephone interview. "The standard theory has been the lower the blood sugar the better off it was for the patient in decreasing the side effects of diabetes."
Researchers at the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, which funded and organised the ACCORD trial, said they will study why patients in the aggressive arm of the study fared worse. But they said there was no suggestion that the GlaxoSmithKline diabetes drug Avandia contributed to deaths in the patients who were on higher doses of drugs.
Dr Steven Nissen, a cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic, said that there are still several questions left unanswered. Nissen in May published an analysis linking Avandia to a 43 percent higher risk of heart attack.
"Avandia was one of the drugs used to get those lower levels of blood sugar, but without the raw numbers it is very difficult to do much in the way of analysis," he said. Researchers said those numbers will come in a soon-to-be published article in a medical journal. At least 170 million people are estimated to have diabetes, a number that is predicted to at least double by 2030. Most have type 2 diabetes.

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