Influence of intensive diabetes treatment on quality-of-life outcomes in the diabetes control and complications trial

Publication Description
Influence of intensive diabetes treatment on quality-of-life outcomes in the diabetes control and complications trial. Abstract OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the effect of intensive diabetes treatment on patient quality of life assessed by the Diabetes Quality-of-Life Measure, the Symptom Checklist-90R, the Medical Outcome Study 36-Item Short Form Survey, and intercurrent psychosocial events in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT). RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The DCCT was a 29-center prospective controlled clinical trial that demonstrated the beneficial effect of intensive diabetes treatment on retinopathy, nephropathy, and neuropathy. The 1,441 volunteers with IDDM, aged 13-39 years, were randomly assigned to intensive or conventional diabetes therapy. The volunteers were followed for a mean of 6.5 years (range 3-9 years). Quality-of-life data were collected during annual visits. Of the volunteers, 99% completed the study, and > 95% of scheduled tests were completed. RESULTS: All analyses of quality of life, psychiatric symptom indexes, and psychosocial event data showed no differences between intensive and conventional diabetes treatment. CONCLUSION: Under careful treatment conditions, such as those followed in the DCCT, patients undergoing intensive diabetes treatment do not face deterioration in the quality of their lives, even while the rigor of their diabetes care is increased.

Primary Author
The DCCT Research Group

Volume
19

Issue
3

Start Page
195

Other Pages
203

Publisher
American Diabetes Association

URL
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/content/19/3/195.abstract

PMID
8742561



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetes Care

Publication Year
1996

Publication Date
Mar 1,

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0149-5992

Document Object Index
10.2337/diacare.19.3.195