Association Between 7 Years of Intensive Treatment of Type 1 Diabetes and Long-term Mortality

Publication Description
IMPORTANCE: Whether mortality in type 1 diabetes mellitus is affected following intensive glycemic therapy has not been established. OBJECTIVE: To determine whether mortality differed between the original intensive and conventional treatment groups in the long-term follow-up of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) cohort. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: After the DCCT (1983-1993) ended, participants were followed up in a multisite (27 US and Canadian academic clinical centers) observational study (Epidemiology of Diabetes Control and Complications EDIC]) until December 31, 2012. Participants were 1441 healthy volunteers with diabetes mellitus who, at baseline, were 13 to 39 years of age with 1 to 15 years of diabetes duration and no or early microvascular complications, and without hypertension, preexisting cardiovascular disease, or other potentially life-threatening disease. INTERVENTIONS AND EXPOSURES: During the clinical trial, participants were randomly assigned to receive intensive therapy (n = 711) aimed at achieving glycemia as close to the nondiabetic range as safely possible, or conventional therapy (n = 730) with the goal of avoiding symptomatic hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia. At the end of the DCCT, after a mean of 6.5 years, intensive therapy was taught and recommended to all participants and diabetes care was returned to personal physicians. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Total and cause-specific mortality was assessed through annual contact with family and friends and through records over 27 years’ mean follow-up. RESULTS: Vital status was ascertained for 1429 (99.2%) participants. There were 107 deaths, 64 in the conventional and 43 in the intensive group. The absolute risk difference was −109 per 100 000 patient-years (95% CI, −218 to −1), with lower all-cause mortality risk in the intensive therapy group (hazard ratio HR] = 0.67 95% CI, 0.46-0.99]; P = .045). Primary causes of death were cardiovascular disease (24 deaths; 22.4%), cancer (21 deaths; 19.6%), acute diabetes complications (19 deaths; 17.8%), and accidents or suicide (18 deaths; 16.8%). Higher levels of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) were associated with all-cause mortality (HR = 1.56 95% CI, 1.35-1.81 per 10% relative increase in HbA1c]; P < .001), as well as the development of albuminuria (HR = 2.20 95% CI, 1.46-3.31]; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: After a mean of 27 years’ follow-up of patients with type 1 diabetes, 6.5 years of initial intensive diabetes therapy was associated with a modestly lower all-cause mortality rate when compared with conventional therapy. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifiers: NCT00360815 and NCT00360893

Primary Author
Orchard,Trevor J.
Nathan,David M.
Zinman,Bernard
Cleary,Patricia
Brillon,David
Backlund,Jye-Yu C.
Lachin,John M.

Volume
313

Issue
1

Start Page
45

Other Pages
53

Publisher
American Medical Association

URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.2014.16107 http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jama.2014.16107



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association

Publication Year
2015

Publication Date
Jan 6,

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0098-7484

Document Object Index
10.1001/jama.2014.16107