Longo Miriam, Bellastella Giuseppe, Maiorino Maria Ida, Meier Juris J, Esposito Katherine, Giugliano Dario
Unit of Endocrinology and Metabolic Diseases, Department of Advanced Medical and Surgical Sciences, University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli, Naples, Italy.
Diabetes Division, St Josef Hospital, Ruhr-University Bochum, Bochum, Germany.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne). 2019 Feb 18;10:45. doi: 10.3389/fendo.2019.00045. eCollection 2019.
Diabetes is becoming one of the most widespread health burning problems in the elderly. Worldwide prevalence of diabetes among subjects over 65 years was 123 million in 2017, a number that is expected to double in 2045. Old patients with diabetes have a higher risk of common geriatric syndromes, including frailty, cognitive impairment and dementia, urinary incontinence, traumatic falls and fractures, disability, side effects of polypharmacy, which have an important impact on quality of life and may interfere with anti-diabetic treatment. Because of all these factors, clinical management of type 2 diabetes in elderly patients currently represents a real challenge for the physician. Actually, the optimal glycemic target to achieve for elderly diabetic patients is still a matter of debate. The American Diabetes Association suggests a HbA1c goal <7.5% for older adults with intact cognitive and functional status, whereas, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) recommends HbA1c levels of 6.5% or lower as long as it can be achieved safely, with a less stringent target (>6.5%) for patients with concurrent serious illness and at high risk of hypoglycemia. By contrast, the American College of Physicians (ACP) suggests more conservative goals (HbA1c levels between 7 and 8%) for most older patients, and a less intense pharmacotherapy, when HbA1C levels are ≤6.5%. Management of glycemic goals and antihyperglycemic treatment has to be individualized in accordance to medical history and comorbidities, giving preference to drugs that are associated with low risk of hypoglycemia. Antihyperglycemic agents considered safe and effective for type 2 diabetic older patients include: metformin (the first-line agent), pioglitazone, dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitors, glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists. Insulin secretagogue agents have to be used with caution because of their significant hypoglycemic risk; if used, short-acting sulfonylureas, as gliclazide, or glinides as repaglinide, should be preferred. When using complex insulin regimen in old people with diabetes, attention should be paid for the risk of hypoglycemia. In this paper we aim to review and discuss the best glycemic targets as well as the best treatment choices for older people with type 2 diabetes based on current international guidelines.
糖尿病正成为老年人中最普遍的严重健康问题之一。2017年,全球65岁以上人群中的糖尿病患病率为1.23亿,预计到2045年这一数字将翻倍。老年糖尿病患者发生常见老年综合征的风险更高,包括衰弱、认知障碍和痴呆、尿失禁、外伤性跌倒和骨折、残疾、多重用药的副作用,这些对生活质量有重要影响,并可能干扰抗糖尿病治疗。由于所有这些因素,老年患者2型糖尿病的临床管理目前对医生来说是一项真正的挑战。实际上,老年糖尿病患者的最佳血糖控制目标仍是一个有争议的问题。美国糖尿病协会建议,认知和功能状态完好的老年人糖化血红蛋白目标<7.5%,而美国临床内分泌医师协会(AACE)建议,只要能安全实现,糖化血红蛋白水平应达到6.5%或更低,对于并发严重疾病且低血糖风险高的患者,目标可放宽(>6.5%)。相比之下,美国医师学会(ACP)建议大多数老年患者采用更保守的目标(糖化血红蛋白水平在7%至8%之间),当糖化血红蛋白水平≤6.5%时,药物治疗强度应降低。血糖控制目标和降糖治疗必须根据病史和合并症进行个体化,优先选择低血糖风险低的药物。对2型糖尿病老年患者安全有效的降糖药物包括:二甲双胍(一线药物)、吡格列酮、二肽基肽酶4抑制剂、胰高血糖素样肽1受体激动剂。胰岛素促泌剂因其显著的低血糖风险必须谨慎使用;如果使用,应优先选择短效磺脲类药物,如格列齐特,但如果使用瑞格列奈这样的格列奈类药物则应优先选择。在糖尿病老年人中使用复杂胰岛素方案时,应注意低血糖风险。在本文中,我们旨在根据当前国际指南,回顾和讨论2型糖尿病老年人的最佳血糖控制目标以及最佳治疗选择。