Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byKristen Sperry Modified over 10 years ago
1
Diabetes Update Matt Bouchonville, MD Endocrinology Division University of New Mexico ACP New Mexico Chapter Scientific Meeting November 7, 2014 mbouchonville@salud.unm.edu
2
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
3
Diabetes: Current rates and projections CDC Press Release 2010: 1 in 3 adults with DM by 2050CDC Press Release 2010: 1 in 3 adults with DM by 2050 JAMA 2014;311(17):1778.: Increase in prevalence in youth between 2001 and 2009 of T1D (20%) and T2D (30%)JAMA 2014;311(17):1778.: Increase in prevalence in youth between 2001 and 2009 of T1D (20%) and T2D (30%) ADA Report: health care costs for DM increased by 40% to $245 billion between 2007 and 2012ADA Report: health care costs for DM increased by 40% to $245 billion between 2007 and 2012
4
Diabetes prevalence in the US leveling off?
5
Lower rates of diabetes- related complications in the US
6
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
7
Surgery group >6X’s more likely to be in remission of T2D at 15 yrs
8
Remission less likely with longer duration of diabetes
9
Surgery associated with >50% reduction in microvascular complications
10
Surgery associated with 30% reduction in macrovascular complications
11
Impact of bariatric surgery on diabetes- related complications attenuated by longer duration of diabetes
12
Conclusions Compared to usual care, bariatric surgery was associated with : Higher diabetic remission rates Fewer diabetic complications Bariatric surgery may have less influence on diabetic remission and complication rates in patients with longer duration of disease
13
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
14
SGLT2- inhibitors
17
Similar A1c reduction (-0.52%) by end of study
18
Weight loss (-3.22 kg) vs gain (+1.44 kg) with SGLT2I versus SU treatment
19
Less hypoglycemia with SGLT2I vs SU treatment
20
FDA Approval March 2013 – Canagliflozin (Invokana) January 2014 – Dapagliflozin (Farxiga) August 2014 – Empagliflozin (Jardiance) Contraindications: Severe renal impairment Adverse effects: Hypotension/dehydration, genital mycotic infections
21
Inhaled insulin
22
Afrezza (Technosphere insulin) Technosphere insulin particles made up of diketopiperazine derivatives and insulin, which self-organize into a lattice array, and form particles of 2–4 µm diameter.
23
Rapid absorption of Technosphere insulin
24
Modest A1c reduction at 12 weeks Cough ~30%Cough ~30% No clinically meaningful changes in PFT’s (short-term)No clinically meaningful changes in PFT’s (short-term)
25
Affrezza: FDA Approval June 2014 Prandial insulin in T1D or T2D Baseline PFT’s required Post-market studies in progress: –Subjects with baseline lung disease –Lung cancer risk?
26
U-300 Insulin glargine (Lantus)
27
Similar reduction in A1c compared to U-100 glargine
28
Similar reduction in FPG compared to U-100 glargine
29
Similar doses of basal and mealtime insulin
30
Less nocturnal hypoglycemia with U-300 glargine
31
Similar glycemic control and dosing with U- 300 glargine insulin but less nocturnal hypoglycemia
32
Insulin peglispro (LY2605541)
33
Insulin PEG (20 kDa)
34
Insulin peglispro (LY2605541) Patent application US 12/481,111, 2009.
35
Insulin peglispro (LY2605541) Compared to insulin glargine: Less glycemic variability Less hypoglycemia No weight gain Preferential hepatic (vs peripheral action) Diabetes Care 2014;37:659-665. Diabetes Care 2014;37:2609-2615. Diabetes 2014;63:390-392.
36
Glimins
37
Imeglimin Targets mitochondria (oxidative phosphorylation blocker) = decreased hepatic gluconeogenesis Increases skeletal muscle glucose uptake Enhanced insulin secretion in response to glucose
38
A1c reduction of 0.7% compared to addition of placebo
39
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
40
Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII)
41
CSII allows for delivery of variable rates of basal insulin infusion throughout the day Basal insulin rates
42
Does insulin pump therapy eradicate the dawn phenomenon? Diabetes 2014;63:Supplement 1 A212-A343.
44
Unpredictability of the dawn phenomenon Roughly a 50% chance of the dawn phenomenon occurring on any given night
45
No impact on frequency of the dawn phenomenon (A) but increased hypoglycemia (B) in dawn programmers vs non-programmers *, P = 0.47 compared with dawn programmers. †, P = 0.001 compared with dawn programmers
46
Conclusions The dawn phenomenon does not occur predictably in patients with type 1 diabetes CSII programming for a fixed increase in early morning insulin to counteract the dawn phenomenon was associated with: No effect on the occurrence of the dawn phenomenon Increased rates of hypoglycemia The prevailing strategy for countering the dawn phenomenon is not effective and may be hazardous to the patient
47
FDA Approves Threshold Suspend Feature
48
Mean glucose values in 1,438 threshold suspend events
49
Less nocturnal hypoglycemia (38% reduction) with threshold suspend feature
50
No increase in hemoglobin A1c
51
No difference in rare occurrence of ketosis between control group and threshold suspend users
52
Bionic Pancreas
53
5-day outpatient study in 20 adults and 32 adolescents with T1D Bionic pancreas vs conventional insulin pump
54
Adults: average glucose 133 mg/dL (bionic) vs 159 mg/dL (pump); P<0.001Adults: average glucose 133 mg/dL (bionic) vs 159 mg/dL (pump); P<0.001 Adolescents: average glucose 138 mg/dL (bionic) vs 157 mg/dL (pump); P=0.004Adolescents: average glucose 138 mg/dL (bionic) vs 157 mg/dL (pump); P=0.004 Adults: Percent of time hypoglycemic 4.1% (bionic) vs 7.3% (pump); P=0.01Adults: Percent of time hypoglycemic 4.1% (bionic) vs 7.3% (pump); P=0.01 Adolescents: Percent of time hypoglycemic 6.1% (bionic) vs 7.6% (pump); P=0.23Adolescents: Percent of time hypoglycemic 6.1% (bionic) vs 7.6% (pump); P=0.23
55
(almost)
56
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
57
Y Y Y Type 1 diabetic patient Islet cell transplantation Immune recognition of transplanted islet cells requires immunosuppression Encapsulation of islet cells in a PFTE device shields them from immune attack (polytetrafluoroethylene)
58
Human islet cells subcutaneously implanted into rodents After 5 months: –Stable islet cell mass –Sufficient insulin secretion to ameliorate experimental diabetes
60
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
62
No difference in sustained viral response to treatment in patients treated via ECHO model vs those treated in UNM HCV clinic ECHO model is an effective way to treat HCV infection in underserved communities
63
New Mexico Counties with Endocrinologists Type 1 diabetes referrals Type 2 diabetes referrals Data derived from NM DOH, UNM Quality Dept
64
Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust 3-year pilot program 8 Endo ECHO Centers of Excellence (COE) in New Mexico Evaluation conducted by New York University
65
Adult Endocrinologist Pediatric Endocrinologist Nephrologist RN/CDE/ nutritionist RN/CDE/ nutritionist Pharmacist Behavioral Health specialist Community Health Worker Social worker Endo ECHO: Specialist Panel
66
Endo ECHO Community Partners = Endo ECHO COE’s
67
Evaluation (NYU) Utilization measures –Hospitalizations Disease-specific outcomes –HbA1c, BP, LDL Patient-specific outcomes –Patient satisfaction, medication adherence, behavioral change Provider-specific outcomes –Provider satisfaction, self-efficacy, knowledge
68
Diabetes Update 1.The “stats” revisited 2.Bariatric surgery – long-term effects on DM 3.Newer drugs for diabetes 4.Technology update 5.A “cure” for type 1 diabetes? 6.Endo ECHO: Meeting the needs of underserved communities
69
Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.