Diabetes guidelines
should change - Lower blood sugar needed
Newswise — A Pennington
Biomedical Research Center researcher and diabetes expert
believes that physicians with diabetic patients should aim
for much lower levels of blood glucose than current
guidelines suggest. He believes the current recommendations
for blood-sugar levels are not low enough to avoid a major
complication of diabetes: heart disease.
Citing research published
in this month's issue of the New England Journal of Medicine
(NEJM), PBRC researcher William Cefalu, M.D., says that if
the medical community believes long-term control of blood
sugar levels can reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease,
then "a reassessment of our clinical goals may be in order."
The work, to be published
December 22, shows that more aggressive control of blood
sugar levels, by use of a more intensive insulin regimen,
appears to help avoid long-term cardiovascular disease.
Cefalu made his remarks in an editorial in the same issue of
the NEJM.
Currently, physicians
counsel their patients with Type 1 (also called juvenile
diabetes) and Type 2 (often called adult-onset diabetes) to
maintain adequate long-term blood glucose control by
achieving an A1c test of 7 percent, which is suggested by
the American Diabetes Association. The A1c test is a simple
test widely used by physicians during normal office visits
to determine blood sugar levels. It measures the amount of
blood sugar attached to hemoglobin, a protein found in red
blood cells. A normal level is considered to be around
6-percent. Cefalu believes the medical community should
rethink this number in light of the newly published findings
that reveal long-term, more intensive control of blood sugar
levels lead to far less cardiovascular disease.
Cefalu also states that
because effects on the cardiovascular system are seen in
younger individuals with Type 1 diabetes compared to
non-diabetic individuals, the suggested blood-sugar levels
for juveniles should be revised downward as well from the
current guidelines of 8 percent for ages 6 through 12 and
7.5 percent for ages 13 through 19.
Cefalu acknowledges that
these would be very difficult goals to reach in that many
physicians - and patients - currently struggle to meet the
existing guidelines. He states, however, to ignore the data
could continue to lead to avoidable cases of heart disease.
"The medical community
needs better means, different strategies, and a different
mind-set," Cefalu said," if we hope to improve and maintain
glycemic [blood sugar] control in patients with Type 1
diabetes and minimize side effects."
The Pennington Biomedical
Research Center is a campus of the Louisiana State
University System and conducts both clinical and basic
research. It is the largest academically based nutrition
research center in the world, with the greatest number of
obesity researchers on faculty. The Center's nearly 600
employees occupy several buildings on the 234-acre campus.