Literature DB >> 20809668

Improving treatment success rates for type 2 diabetes: recommendations for a changing environment.

Curtis Triplitt1.   

Abstract

As demonstrated by suboptimal levels of therapeutic goal achievement, there exists significant room for improvement in type 2 diabetes management. Despite widespread disease awareness and high rates of risk-factor testing in managed care, effective metabolic control in patients with type 2 diabetes is lacking and points toward a phenomenon known as clinical inertia. Clinical inertia, defined as a failure to initiate or advance therapy in a patient who is not at the evidence-based goal, is a key contributing factor in the suboptimal rates of therapeutic target achievement for type 2 diabetes. The causes of clinical inertia are multifactorial and interactive, arising among patients, providers, and health systems and from specific characteristics of available treatments. Therapeutic nonadherence is perhaps the most significant factor contributing to clinical inertia, with recent analyses demonstrating that providers are more likely to prescribe a dose escalation in patients who are adherent to therapy compared with those who are not. While the concept may be counterintuitive, antihyperglycemic agents also have the potential to cause or contribute to the phenomenon of clinical inertia. This often occurs via factors inherent to the drugs themselves, such as treatment-related adverse effects (eg, hypoglycemia, weight gain, edema, gastrointestinal symptoms), perception of long-term safety profiles, and the complexity of the treatment regimen. Often not considered, but equally important, is the durability of an antihyperglycemic agent to maintain glycosylated hemoglobin (A1C) level goals. Because no monotherapy exists to arrest the pancreatic beta-cell failure of type 2 diabetes, early combination therapy with thiazolidinediones and glucagon-like protein-1 agonists that is associated with sustained A1C level reduction is the only hope to change the progressive nature of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20809668

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Manag Care        ISSN: 1088-0224            Impact factor:   2.229


  9 in total

1.  Management of type-2 diabetes mellitus in adults: focus on individualizing non-insulin therapies.

Authors:  Luigi Brunetti; Julie Kalabalik
Journal:  P T       Date:  2012-12

2.  Are adults diagnosed with diabetes achieving the American Diabetes Association clinical practice recommendations?

Authors:  Cynthia M Pérez; Isaedmarie Febo-Vázquez; Manuel Guzmán; Ana Patricia Ortiz; Erick Suárez
Journal:  P R Health Sci J       Date:  2012-03       Impact factor: 0.705

3.  Therapeutic Inertia: Still a Long Way to Go That Cannot Be Postponed.

Authors:  Manel Mata-Cases; Josep Franch-Nadal; Mònica Gratacòs; Dídac Mauricio
Journal:  Diabetes Spectr       Date:  2020-02

Review 4.  The EP3 Receptor/Gz Signaling Axis as a Therapeutic Target for Diabetes and Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Michael D Schaid; Jaclyn A Wisinski; Michelle E Kimple
Journal:  AAPS J       Date:  2017-06-05       Impact factor: 4.009

5.  Diabetes, Therapeutic Inertia, and Patients' Medication Experience.

Authors:  Andrew S Bzowyckyj; John E Begert
Journal:  Diabetes Spectr       Date:  2020-02

6.  A longitudinal study examining adherence to guidelines in diabetes care according to different definitions of adequacy and timeliness.

Authors:  Grigory Sidorenkov; Flora M Haaijer-Ruskamp; Dick de Zeeuw; Petra Denig
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-09-08       Impact factor: 3.240

Review 7.  Management of diabetes mellitus in individuals with chronic kidney disease: therapeutic perspectives and glycemic control.

Authors:  Carolina C R Betônico; Silvia M O Titan; Maria Lúcia C Correa-Giannella; Márcia Nery; Márcia Queiroz
Journal:  Clinics (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2016-01       Impact factor: 2.365

8.  Glycaemic impact of treatment intensification in patients with type 2 diabetes uncontrolled with oral antidiabetes drugs or basal insulin.

Authors:  Erin K Buysman; Tao Fan; Cori Blauer-Peterson; Lesley-Ann Miller-Wilson
Journal:  Endocrinol Diabetes Metab       Date:  2018-06-11

Review 9.  Changing the approach to type 2 diabetes treatment: A comparison of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and sulphonylureas across the continuum of care.

Authors:  Marco Orsini Federici; Raffaella Gentilella; Antonella Corcos; Enrico Torre; Stefano Genovese
Journal:  Diabetes Metab Res Rev       Date:  2021-02-07       Impact factor: 4.876

  9 in total

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