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Sunday, October, 12, 2008

ADVANCE and ACCORD and A1C

by  Dr. Bill Quick
Saturday, February 16, 2008
Dr. Bill Quick
Dr. Bill Quick
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Physician and webmaster of DiabetesMonitor.com

Dr. Bill Quick and his wife Steph are the authors of one of the...

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Last week, I commented on the ACCORD diabetes trial (ACCORD AND A1C), which surprised experts when there were an unexpected finding that trying to lower A1C below 6 in people with T2DM and cardiovascular disease resulted in a higher death rate. The reason for the increased death rate is not clear: see my earlier story for more details.

Since then, AACE (American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists) has reviewed the ACCORD trial, and recommended "We encourage doctors to individualize the A1c target goals on patients with Type 2 diabetes at higher risk. An A1c target of 6.5% or less is useful for many, including patients with Type 1 diabetes, and probably Type 2 patients at lower cardiovascular risk, but this goal is clearly not appropriate for all type 2 patients."

And AADE (American Association of Diabetes Educators) also commented after ACCORD that they "would like to caution the diabetes community against changing blood glucose monitoring treatment recommendations based solely on the findings of the ACCORD study."

But this week, it has been reported that another acronymous diabetes trial (ADVANCE, Action in Diabetes and Vascular disease: PreterAx and DiamicroN MR Controlled Evaluation) found the reverse: in the ADVANCE study, involving 11,140 high-risk patients with type 2 diabetes, results from an interim analysis did not show evidence of an increased risk of death among those patients receiving intensive treatment to lower blood glucose. Dr. Rory Collins, who chaired the ADVANCE data monitoring and safety committee, said the ADVANCE results were based on more than twice as much data and similar levels of glucose control as in the ACCORD study. (There's a press release from the ADVANCE trial online at
Preliminary findings from the largest-ever study of treatments for diabetes provide no evidence that intensive treatment to lower blood glucose (sugar) increases risk of death.The ADVANCE trial was funded by the National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia and Servier, the manufacturer of a sulfonylurea drug for diabetes, gliclazide. The trial also included an investigation into more intensive blood-pressure lowering, which was reported previously.)

So we've now got opposite results, and a dilemma: should we believe one or the other or both (or neither!)? Well, there's simply not enough data about the surprising results from ACCORD to decide what happened. We're all awaiting further results being released, as well as the results of yet another study of the same sort later this year.

 

Reuters quotes Dr. Denise Simons-Morton, project officer for ACCORD at NHLBI as saying "There are some differences between the ACCORD and the ADVANCE studies. We will need to communicate about the data with each other to understand what those differences are... The data I would like to see are exactly what drugs people were on, what were the mortality rates."

And if diabetes docs were confused about what to recommend to their patients after looking at ACCORD, they're now in a tizzy after learning of ADVANCE. A commentary from the American Diabetes Association pretty well sums things up: "The American Diabetes Association believes that the information from ADVANCE is very important and further magnifies the uncertainty over whether intensive glucose control may harm some people with diabetes. Of note, the studies were not identical, and it is unclear whether their differences can explain the discrepancy in results. ADA eagerly awaits the full reports from ACCORD and ADVANCE..." ADA's recommendation: "In the meantime, the American Diabetes Association continues to advise most people with diabetes to strive for an A1C... of less than 7 percent, but as always stresses individualization of treatment goals. People with type 2 diabetes who have existing CVD or multiple CVD risk factors should consult with their health care team about their treatment goals."

 

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