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Diabetes in Primary Care

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Diabetes in Primary Care VTS 23/3/11 Types of diabetes and related conditions Type 1 (5-15%) Type 2 Pre-diabetes (IFG, IGT, GD) Secondary diabetes Epidemiology One ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Diabetes in Primary Care


1
Diabetes in Primary Care
  • VTS 23/3/11

2
Types of diabetes and related conditions
  • Type 1 (5-15)
  • Type 2
  • Pre-diabetes (IFG, IGT, GD)
  • Secondary diabetes

3
Epidemiology
  • One million diagnosed diabetics in England (2)
  • 1 in 20 people age gt 65
  • 1 in 5 people age gt 85
  • Increasing prevalence Type 2 DM increased from
    2.8 in 1996 to 4.3 in 2005
  • 40-60 patients per General Practitioner
  • 41 NHS funding for Type 2 spent on inpatient
    care for complications
  • Most diagnosed after 40 with peak onset age 60

4
What are the problems in diabetes?
  • Mortality from CHD 5 times higher
  • Mortality from CVA 3 times higher
  • Leading cause of renal failure
  • Leading cause of blindness in working age
  • Second commonest cause of lower limb amputation

5
Aims of diabetes care
  • Identify those with DM and related conditions
  • Improve quality of service for diabetic patients
  • Tackle variations in care
  • Make best practice the norm
  • Reach communities at greatest risk
  • Reduce complication rates
  • Eliminate discrimination

6
Challenges in dealing with diabetes
  • Increasing numbers
  • Morbidity
  • Medical resource usage
  • Cost
  • Changing lifestyle
  • Improving outcome

7
Risk factors for Type 2 diabetes
  • Age
  • Obesity (80) esp truncal
  • Physical inactivity activity increases insulin
    sensitivity
  • Genetic factors
  • Ethnicity

8
Finding Type 2 diabetes
  • 50 diabetes undiagnosed i.e. 1 million
  • Onset of diabetes may be 7-12 years before
    clinical recognition
  • 25 have evidence of microvascular complications
    at clinical diagnosis
  • Value of population screening has not been
    established
  • Early interventions of diet lifestyle amongst
    at-risk groups is preventative and worthwhile
  • Focus on at-risk populations - who could you
    screen in practice how?

9
At risk populations for Type 2 DM
  • All with cardiovascular disease
  • Those with BMI gt 30
  • Skin sepsis especially if recurrent
  • Thrush especially if recurrent
  • Those with ve FH of Type 2 DM
  • Ethnic groups especially at certain ages
  • Annual review of those with pre-diabetes

10
Identifying diabetes in practice
  • Protocols/prompts/reminders
  • New patient screening
  • All within CV care system
  • NHS screening checks
  • Registers systematic monitoring of at-risk
    patients

11
Diagnostic Criteria for Type 2 DM(WHO)
  • If symptoms of hyperglycaemia a single fasting
    plasma gt7 or a single random plasma glucose gt11.1
    or
  • If asymptomatic fasting glucose gt7 on two
    separate occasions

12
Management Type 2 DM
  • Education/diet/lifestyle
  • Smoking
  • Monitor control blood sugar
  • Control hypertension lt 140/80 (lt130/80 if end
    organ damage)
  • Manage lipids
  • Monitor for renal damage
  • Monitor for retinopathy
  • Feet
  • Depression
  • Monitor for neuropathy
  • ED
  • Autonomic

13
Monitoring
  • HBA1c Glycated HbA1c
  • Measure of integrated blood glucose control over
    preceding 3/12 but with extra weighting for 1/12
    prior to sampling
  • NICE target 6.5
  • QOF target moving to 7.5
  • HbA1c will become a diagnostic test
  • Role of self-monitoring
  • 20 can do this with combination
    diet/lifestyle/exercise
  • The rest will need lifestyle modification mono
    or multiple therapies including insulin

14
Medication
  • Metformin
  • Starting point for most patients
  • Reduces cardiovascular mortality compared with
    other hypoglycaemic agents
  • Helpful with weight
  • Review dose of metformin if creatinine gt130 or
    eGFR lt45
  • Stop metformin if creatinine gt150 or eGFR lt30
  • Temporarily withdraw with tissue hypoxia
  • For 3 days after iodine containing contrast
    medium
  • 2 days before GA

15
However..
  • Natural trend of disease is of deteriorating beta
    cell function
  • 50 of those on monotherapy require additions at
    3 years
  • 50 of patients with chronic illness do not take
    medications as prescribed
  • Achieving sustaining long term lifestyle change
    is difficult over time non-medication Rx
    becomes ineffective

16
Medications
  • Sulphonylureas
  • Thiazolidinediones pioglitazone
  • Post-prandial glucose modifiers
  • DPP-4 inhibitors - gliptins
  • GLP-1 mimetics exenatide, liraglutide
  • Orlistat
  • Insulin regime?
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