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Hot Topics in Internal Medicine Molly Cooke MD Chair-elect, Board of Governors Questions Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury?
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Hot Topics in Internal Medicine Molly Cooke MD Chair-elect, Board of Governors
Questions • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD?
Questions • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD?
Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • ACCORD Effects of intensive glucose lowering in Type 2 diabetes N Engl J Med 2008; 358: 2545-59 • The ADVANCE Collaborative Group. Intensive blood glucose control and vascular outcomes in patients with Type 2 diabetes. N Engl J Med 2008; 358:2560-72 • Duckworth W et al. Glucose control and vascular complications in veterans with Type 2 diabetes. N Engl J Med 2009; 360:129-39.
ACCORD 2008 • RCT 10,251 patients • Intensive therapy HgbA1c 6.4% vs. standard therapy HgbA1c 7.5% • Terminated early after 3.5 years
ADVANCE 2008 RCT 11,140 patients Median follow up 5 years Intensive control HgbA1c 6.5% Standard control HgbA1c 7.3%
Glucose control and vascular complications (Duckworth) 2008 • RCT 1791 veterans, median follow up 5.6 years • Intensive therapy HgbA1c 6.9% vs. standard therapy HgbA1c 8.4% • Adverse effects, particularly hypoglycemia, 17.6% in standard therapy vs. 24.1% in intensive therapy
Questions • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD?
Risk of death associated with medications for recently diagnosed COPD Lee 2008
Inhaled corticosteroids in patients with stable COPD Drummond Ann Intern Med 2008
Long-term daily erythromycin and COPD exacerbations Seemungal Am J Resp Crit Care Med 2008
Questions • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD?
Summary • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • No, and it is associated with excess morbidity and mortality • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Discontinuation of NSAID’s, pre-procedure hydration, possibly possibly sodium bicarbonate > sodium chloride, probably N-acetylcysteine • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD? • Inhaled steroids are associated with increased pneumonia • Ipatropium may be associated with increased mortality • Daily macrolide prophylaxis appears to decrease exacerbations
Acute Kidney Injury • Sensitivity and specificity of a single emergency department measurement of urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin for diagnosing acute kidney injury Nickolas T, et al. Ann Intern Med 2008; 148(11):810-819
Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associate Lipocalin (NGAL) • Small protein belonging to the lipocalin family of proteins • Expressed by neutrophils and various epithelia, including the renal proximal tubules • Functions are not completely understood • Upregulated in cells under “stress” • Released from secondary granules of activated neutrophils • Initially proposed as a marker for infections and certain adenocarcinomas • NGAL has an early and dramatic rise in urine after renal injury
Print Nikolas et al Ann Intern Med 2008
A single measurement of urinary NGAL helps to distinguish acute injury from normal renal function, prerenal azotemia, and CKI • This may help patient disposition from the ED to home, observation unit for hydration, versus full admission
Acute kidney injury with iodinated contrast McCullough PA. Crit Care Med 2008; 36(4Suppl):S204-211
Meta-analysis - Nephrotoxicity of high- and low- osmolality iodinated contrast medium Barrett 1993, as presented in McCullough 2008
Acute Kidney Injury Prevention, incidence, and outcomes of contrast-induced acute kidney injury Weisbord SD, et al. Arch Intern Med 2008; 168(12):1325-32
Use of preventive therapy is variable Weisbord SD, et al. Arch Intern Med 2008; 168(12):1325-32
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) Meta-analysis: effectiveness of drugs for preventing contrast-induced nephropathy Kelly AM, et al. Ann Intern Med 2008; 148(4):284-294.
Dopamine Fenoldopam Furosemide N-Acetylcysteine 0.62 (0.44-0.88) Theophylline
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) • Bottomline • CIAKI is associated with poor outcomes • Need to standardize contrast induced acute kidney injury (CIAKI) prophylaxis • Patients with risk factors for CIAKI (chronic kidney disease and diabetes) should receive non-ionic contrast • NAC is more effective in preventing CIAKI injury than hydration alone
Summary • Does intensive glucose control improve outcomes in Type 2 diabetes? • What is the optimal prophylaxis to prevent contrast-induced acute kidney injury? • Do inhaled medications increase morbidity and/or mortality in patients with COPD?
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