Consensus on type 1 diabetes management: Special considerations
Both Dr. Del Prato and Dr. Rydén cited presentation of the new type 1 diabetes ADA/EASD consensus report as among the most clinically important of the conference. Initially presented in draft form at the ADA Scientific Sessions in June 2021, the document aims to move away from routinely applying principles derived from studies of patients with type 2 diabetes to those with type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune disease with unique characteristics.
The final version of the document is expected to include information on goals of therapy, glycemic targets, prevention and management of hypoglycemia and diabetic ketoacidosis, psychosocial care, and special populations, among other issues. It is also expected to include a section dedicated to adjunctive treatments beyond insulin, including metformin, pramlintide, glucagonlike peptide–1 agonists, and sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 inhibitors for certain patients.
Dr. Del Prato noted, “From a clinical point of view, this is quite an important step that two major organizations came together recommending some strategies for treating type 2 diabetes ... It really deals with a big problem and tries to provide the tools for improving homogenization of the treatment of type 1 diabetes across the different health systems.”
And Dr. Rydén commented: “I think it’s really important to have, since there’s been so much focus on type 2 diabetes for the last few years, and to have the ADA and EASD getting together and actually write this.”
But Dr. Rydén also pointed out that outcomes data are much more conclusive for drugs in type 2 diabetes to inform international guidelines, whereas “this is much more difficult to demonstrate with type 1 diabetes. With a new pump or [continuous glucose monitor (CGM)] you might show a reduction in [hemoglobin] A1c of X percent or X mmol/mol or hypoglycemia events, but it’s much harder to show improvements in hard outcomes like deaths and cardiovascular events. I’m really looking forward to having this presented.”
Diabetes in 2021: It’s personal
Several meeting sessions will specifically address precision medicine approaches, including the TriMASTER study, which aims to identify subgroups of patients with type 2 diabetes who respond well or poorly to particular drugs based on clinical characteristics so that treatments can be better targeted to individuals. In total, 600 patients with type 2 diabetes and suboptimal glycemic control with metformin were randomized to a dipeptidyl peptidase–4 inhibitor, an SGLT2 inhibitor, or thiazolidinedione (TZD).
According to Dr. Rydén, “The TriMASTER final results will be interesting. TZDs still have a place. ... You can’t give them to people with heart failure, but I think like a carpenter you have to have many tools in your toolbox. And I still think that there are some individuals who respond well to pioglitazone. [The study findings] could be influential, depending on the results.”
An EASD/ADA symposium entitled “Optimizing diabetes diagnosis, prevention, and care: Is precision medicine the answer?” will offer three distinct perspectives, with one speaker arguing it’s the future of diabetes medicine, another that it isn’t, and a third explaining that “the devil is in the details.”
The Diabetologia symposium will focus on a related concept: The use of artificial intelligence in diabetes research and care, with particular application to glucose control, neuropathy, and wound healing.
And during the 36th Camillo Golgi Lecture, kidney disease expert H.J. Lambers Heerspink, PhD, of the University of Groningen (the Netherlands), will speak about personalizing treatment for patients with type 2 diabetes, arguing that “the mean is meaningless.”