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Diabetes in the Older Patient. Debra Bynum, MD Associate Professor of Medicine Division of Geriatric Medicine University of North Carolina March 2010. True or False?. 1. A healthy 90 year old woman is likely to live to be 95…
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Diabetes in the Older Patient Debra Bynum, MD Associate Professor of Medicine Division of Geriatric Medicine University of North Carolina March 2010
True or False? • 1. A healthy 90 year old woman is likely to live to be 95… • 2. Obesity is associated with increased mortality in people over the age of 70 • 3. Patients over the age of 80 with systolic hypertension should not be treated because of an increased risk of falls
Outline • Prevalence • Heterogeneity (Patients and Disease) • Specific complications • Diabetes and Geriatric Syndromes • Diabetes in the Frail • Obesity in the Older Patient • Treatment Basics • Take Home Points
Focus • How is diabetes different in the older patient?
Prevalence • Majority of patients with DM are over age 60 • >10% patients over age 65 have DM • >10% over age 60 may have undiagnosed DM • CDC estimates prevalence of DM: 23% (diagnosed and undiagnosed) in people over 60 • Framingham Data: 40% those over 65 have DM or Impaired Fasting Glucose
Heterogeneity: Patients • Average Life expectancy 72-79 • At age 65, average life expectancy 82 • At age 85, average life expectancy 90 • Fastest growing population: over 85 • Differences • Age (65, 75, 85, 95, 100) • Frailty and age are not equal • Associated co-morbidities
Heterogeneity: Disease • Patients with long standing Type 2 Diabetes associated with family history, obesity, and metabolic syndrome • Latent Autoimmune Diabetes in Adults (LADA) • Patients with long standing Type 2 DM with no family history and normal BMI • Patients with new diagnosis of DM after age 60 • Growing population of Patients over age 60 with longstanding Type 1 Diabetes
LADA • Autoimmune (antibodies present at diagnosis) • Resembles type I diabetes • Later onset (after age 30) • Slower progression toward absolute insulin requirement (presentation with ketosis uncommon)
Hyperglycemia • Dehydration • Increased risk in elderly • Decreased oral intake, decreased thirst mechanism • Visual disturbance • Confusion
Nonketotic Hyperglycemic Hyperosmolar Coma • Extremely high glucose in setting of extreme dehydration • Often associated with infection, myocardial event, stroke • More common than DKA in older adults • Higher mortality • Older patients with dementia, decreased access to free water (nursing care setting), and decreased thirst are at higher risk
Hypoglycemia • Risk Factors: • Older age • Renal insufficiency • Long acting oral agents (sulfonylureas) • Poor nutrition • Alcohol use • CHF • Post hospitalization/ frequent hospitalizations • Polypharmacy
Hypoglycemia • Risk 2-9% in cohort studies • ?association with later development of dementia • Cohort study of patients followed over 20 years • Patients with at least one episode of severe hypoglycemia had increased risk of development of diabetes • May be confounder and not causal… • JAMA 2009
Nephropathy • Overall increase prevalence of Renal Insufficiency and ESRD in older patients • Older patients may have multiple etiologies for renal failure (DM, HTN, medications) • Microalbuminuria common (over 30%) and not as predictive of future ESRD in older patients • Highly predictive of CV and stroke risk • ACE inhibitors still recommended
Renal Insufficiency • “Normal Creatinine” may not be normal • Calculate GFR • GFR depends upon age, weight, sex • Creatinine of 1.1 in an 80 pound woman who weighs 98 pounds is not “normal”
Visual Loss • Often multifactorial • Retinopathy often less progressive than in younger patients with DM • Glaucoma three times more common in older patients with DM (11% vs 4%) • Cataracts more common and more rapidly progressive
Foot Care • Neuropathy • Common and not always due to DM in older patients (50% patients over 80 have peripheral neuropathy) • 1/3 older patients cannot see/reach feet
Foot Care • Elderly with DM high risk for infection, cellulitis, ulcers, gangrene and amputation • Cohort study of patients over 10 years, average age 75, from Archives Int Med, 2007: • 19% DM group had episode of gangrene • 3% DM group had amputation
Cardiovascular Risk • Challenges: • Most older patients with DM will die of CV disease • Treatment-Risk Paradox • Older patients have high risk of CV disease • Even small potential decrease in risk of disease could have big benefit and be work risk of treatment • No evidence to suggest that control of diabetes results in less CV risk
CV Disease: Modification of Risk Factors • Evidence that older patients with DM and CVD and hyperlipidemia benefit from treatment with statins (similar to/better than younger population) • Recent studies also showing no additional benefit to “tight” control
CV Disease: Modification of Risk Factors • Evidence from multiple large studies (SHEP, Syst-Eur) that older patients with Systolic Hypertension benefit from treatment • Decrease stroke • Decrease CHF • HYVET: • Patients over age 80 benefit with decrease stroke, CHF, and mortality
Hypertension in Older Patients • Keys from studies: • Treated Systolic Hypertension • Target SBP 150 • Followed standing blood pressures • Benefit seen even though significant number of patients did not even reach target SBP of 150 • Take Home: Moderate SBP reduction in the very elderly can have significant benefit!
Complications: Geriatric Syndromes • Older patients with DM also more likely to have: • Falls • Sarcopenia/muscle wasting • Malnutrition • Depression • Dementia • Urinary Incontinence
Diabetes in the Frail • More modest goals in BP and glucose control • Balance quality if life • Observe for other risks • Ulcers (heel and sacral) • Malnutrition • dehydration
Obesity • Modest overweight (BMI 25-30) associated with LESS mortality in older people • Likely association with increased mortality when BMI over 30 • Conflicting studies with association between weight loss and increased mortality
Obesity • BMI does not perform well in older patients (increased body fat for same weight as we age) • Waist circumference has greater prognostic value than BMI in older patients • Weight loss can be associated with loss of muscle and risk of malnutrition in older patients • Almost impossible to tease apart possible underlying disease and weight loss in patients over age 70
Dietary Restrictions • No evidence to suggest dietary restrictions in frail elders • Balance other concerns: • Quality of life • Malnutrition • Vitamin deficiencies (D) • Risk of fracture • Depression • Chewing/dental problems
Treatment • Treatment options usually similar, balance co-morbidities, frailty, and life expectancy • Target systolic hypertension and hyperlipidemia • No evidence to suggest “tight” control • Modest treatment does have benefit at CV risk reduction in older patients: do not avoid treatment based upon age!! • No evidence to suggest tight control of DM • Goal Hgb A1C 7-8% suggested • Recent ACCORD data supports this
Treatment • Must take into account functional status and caregiver/facility status • Consideration of insulin and glucose monitoring • ?caregiver help if needed • Vision • Arthritis of hands • Cognitive status • Treatment in some cases easier in nursing care facility • Do not avoid treatment in functional, independent patients or in those with needed support
Take Home Points • Older patients with DM differ in many ways • Treatment of DM relies upon treatment of the individual • Do not avoid treatment in older patients based upon age • Older patients with have higher risk of bad outcomes • Modest treatment benefit significant the high risk • Consider goals of treatment and balance: BP, glucose, weight and lipid reduction goals should be MODEST