THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
THE LOW CARB DIABETIC

Promoting a low carb high fat lifestyle for the safe control of diabetes. Eat whole fresh food, more drugs are not the answer.


Welcome to the Low Carb Diabetic forum,have you signed up yet? if not then sign up and join us in the low carb community today!

2 posters

    Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes

    graham64
    graham64
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Male Posts : 3730
    Join date : 2014-08-10
    Location : Lancs

    Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes Empty Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes

    Post by graham64 Fri Apr 24 2015, 22:58

    Background


    Some glucose-lowering drugs or strategies adversely affect cardiovascular outcomes. We aimed to assess the extent to which glucose lowering by various drugs or strategies increases the risk of heart failure in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes, and to establish whether risk is associated with achieved differences in glycaemia or weight control.

    Methods


    We searched Ovid Medline, the Cochrane Library, and meeting abstracts up to Feb 20, 2015, for large randomised controlled trials of glucose-lowering drugs or strategies that assessed cardiovascular outcomes. The primary endpoint was incidence of heart failure. We derived pooled risk ratios (RRs) with random-effects models.

    Findings


    We included data from 14 trials, with mean duration 4·3 (2·3) years, comprising 95 502 patients, of whom 3907 (4%) patients developed a heart failure event. Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies were associated with a 0·50% (SD 0·33) reduction in HbA1c and a 1·7 kg (2·Cool weight gain. Overall, glucose-lowering drugs or strategies increased the risk of heart failure compared with standard care (RR 1·14, 95% CI 1·01–1·30; p=0·041). The magnitude of this effect varied dependent on the method of glucose lowering (p for interaction=0·00021). Across drug classes, risk was highest with peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor agonists (RR 1·42, 95% CI 1·15–1·76; six trials), intermediate with dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitors (1·25, 1·08–1·45; two trials), and neutral with insulin glargine (0·90, 0·77–1·05; one trial). Target-based intensive glycaemic control strategies (RR 1·00, 95% CI 0·88–1·13; four trials) and intensive weight loss (0·80, 95% CI 0·62–1·04; one trial) were also not associated with development of heart failure. Meta-regression analysis showed that for every 1·0 kg of weight gain associated with glucose-lowering drugs or strategies, there was a 7·1% (95% CI 1·0–13·6) relative increase in the risk of heart failure compared with standard care (p=0·022).

    Interpretation


    Compared with standard care, glycaemic lowering by various drugs or strategies might increase the risk of heart failure, with the magnitude of risk dependent on the method of glucose lowering and, potentially, weight gain.

    Funding

    None.

    http://www.thelancet.com/

     Edit: I don't know how that emoticom got in the post but it didn't show up in the preview Shocked
    Indy51
    Indy51
    Member


    Status :
    Online
    Offline

    Female Posts : 344
    Join date : 2014-08-14
    Location : Perth, Western Australia

    Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes Empty Re: Glucose-lowering drugs or strategies and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with or at risk for type 2 diabetes

    Post by Indy51 Sat Apr 25 2015, 00:41

    I've had that happen to me in the past, Graham. I guess it's something to do with the keyboard shortcut for the "cool" emoticon. Seems to be the ".8" that does it.

      Current date/time is Sun Nov 17 2024, 05:26