| Literature DB >> 22115901 |
Bianca Hemmingsen1, Søren S Lund, Christian Gluud, Allan Vaag, Thomas Almdal, Christina Hemmingsen, Jørn Wetterslev.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of targeting intensive glycaemic control versus conventional glycaemic control on all cause mortality and cardiovascular mortality, non-fatal myocardial infarction, microvascular complications, and severe hypoglycaemia in patients with type 2 diabetes.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22115901 PMCID: PMC3223424 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.d6898
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138

Fig 1 Flow diagram of identification of randomised trials for inclusion
Excluded trials
| Trial | Reason for exclusion |
|---|---|
| ADOPT 201046 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Barbosa et al 198342 | Did not include participants with type 2 diabetes |
| BARI 2D 200947 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Barnett et al 200831 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Blaha et al 200943 | Patients with type 2 diabetes reported together with patients without diabetes |
| Brocco et al 200132 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Chan et al 200948 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Clark et al 198533 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Cleveringa et al 201049 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Corpus et al 200434 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| DIGAMI 199645 | Patients with type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes reported together |
| DIGAMI 2 200519 65 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as a part of acute intervention |
| Du et al 200951 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Eastman et al 199735 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Eibl et al 200436 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Evans et al 198237 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Furnary et al 199938 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Guo et al 200817 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as part of multimodal intervention |
| Hanefeld et al 201052 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| HEART 2D 200959 | Randomised into two groups targeting same HbA1c with different strategies (basal |
| Johansen et al 200754 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Joss et al 200255 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Lazar et al 200444 | Patients with type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes reported together |
| Leibowitz et al 201041 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Melidonis et al 200020 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as part of acute intervention |
| Menard et al 200556 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Olivarius et al 200157 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Piatt et al 201058 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| PROactive et al 200550 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Retnakaran et al 201039 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Ryan et al 200440 | Not a randomised clinical trial |
| Shi et al 201060 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Stefanidis et al 200321 66 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as part of acute intervention |
| Steno 2 200816 62-64 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as part of multimodal intervention |
| UKPDS-44 199953 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Van Bruggen et al 200961 | No predefined differences in glycaemic target |
| Yang et al 200718 | Intensive glycaemic control applied as part of multimodal intervention |
ADOPT=A Diabetes Outcome Progression Trial; BARI 2D=Bypass Angioplasty Revascularization Investigation 2 Diabetes; DIGAMI=Diabetes Insulin-Glucose in Acute Myocardial Infarction; HbA1c=glycated haemoglobin A1c; HEART 2D=Hyperglycaemia and Its Effect After Acute Myocardial Infarction on Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; PROactive=PROspective pioglitAzone Clinical Trial In macroVascular Events; UKPDS=United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study.
Key characteristics of included trials
| Trial | Location | Design | No of intensive/conventional (total) participants | Length of follow-up* | Intensive glycaemic control | Conventional glycaemic control |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACCORD 20084 67-74 | 77 centres; USA and Canada | Randomised, 2×2 factorial design | 5128/5123 (10 251) | 3.5 years | HbA1c <6%; fasting SMBG <5.6 mmol/L or 2 hour blood glucose <7.8 mmol/L | HbA1c 7.0-7.9%; fasting SMBG >5.0 mmol/L |
| ADVANCE 200875-78 | 215 centres; 20 countries | Randomised, factorial design | 5571/5569 (11 140) | 5.0 years | HbA1c ≤6.5% | Glycaemic target of HbA1c defined from local guidelines |
| Bagg et al 200179-82 | 1 centre; New Zealand | Randomised | 21/22 (43) | 20 weeks | HbA1c <7%; before meal capillary glucose 4-7 mmol/L; 2 hour blood glucose <10 mmol/L | Avoid symptoms of hyperglycaemia and fortnightly fasting capillary glucose test >17 mmol/L |
| Becker et al 200383 84 | 1 centre; Netherlands | Randomised | 106/108 (231) | 22 months | Fasting capillary blood glucose <6.5 mmol/L | Fasting capillary blood glucose <8.5 mmol/L |
| IDA 200992 93 | 2 centres; Sweden | Randomised | 51/51 (102) | 6 months and 3 weeks | HbA1c <6.5%; fasting blood glucose 5-7 mmol/L; before meal <10 mmol/L | Standard treatment |
| Jaber et al 199694 | 1 centre; USA | Randomised | 23/22 (45) | 4 months | Fasting blood glucose ≤6.6 mmol/L; 2 hour postprandial glucose <10 mmol/L, or to reach maximum daily dose of sulfonylurea | Not defined |
| Kumamoto 20007 95 96 | 1 centre; Japan | Randomised | 55/55 (110) | 10 years | HbA1c <7.0%; fasting blood glucose <140 mg/dL; 2 hour postprandial glucose <200 mg/dL; mean amplitude of glycaemic excursions <100 mg/dL | Fasting blood glucose close to <140 mg/dL without symptoms of hyperglycaemia or hypoglycaemia |
| Lu et al 201086 | 1 centre; China | Randomised | 21/20 (41) | 12 weeks | Fasting blood glucose <6.1 mmol/L, postprandial 2 hour glucose <7.8 mmol/L | Fasting blood glucose <7.0 mmol/L; postprandial 2 hour glucose <10.0 mmol/L |
| REMBO 200885 | 1 centre; Russia | Randomised | 41/40 (81) | 12 months | HbA1c <7% in participants receiving sulfonylurea; HbA1c <6.5% in participants receiving insulin | Not specified |
| Service et al 198387 | 1 centre; USA | Randomised | 10/10 (20) | 1.75 years | HbA1c to normal range, and to maintain 80 minute postprandial plasma glucose <8.3 mmol/L | Eliminate symptoms, but not to degree to reduce 80 minute postprandial plasma glucose below 150 mg/dL |
| UGDP 197888-91 | 12 centres; USA | Randomised | 204/210 (414) | 12 years | Maintain blood glucose in normal range (defined as fasting blood glucose <110 mg/100 mL, blood glucose <210 mg/100 mL 1 hour after ingestion of 50 g glucose and 1 and 1.5 hours after morning insulin injection) | Minimise likelihood of hypoglycaemic reactions without reducing insulin dose to pharmacologically inactive amounts |
| UKPDS 19981 8 97-102 | 23 centres, UK | Randomised (some participants randomised to blood pressure arm) | 3071/1138 (4209) | UKPDS 33 10.0 years; UKPDS 34 10.7 years | Fasting blood glucose <6 mmol/L in insulin treated patients; pre-meal glucose 4-7 mmol/L | Fasting blood glucose <15 mmol/L without symptoms of hyperglycaemia |
| VA CSDM 1995103-109 | 5 centres; USA | Randomised | 75/78 (153) | 27 months | Maintain mean HbA1c <7.5%; treatment adjusted with home blood glucose monitoring, aiming at fasting blood glucose 4.48-6.44 mmol/L and other pre-prandial levels ≤7.28 mmol/L | Avoid excessive hyperglycaemia or symptoms of excessive glucosuria, ketonuria, or hypoglycaemia (alert HbA1c <12.9%) |
| VADT 20096 110 111 | 20 centres; USA | Randomised | 892/899 (1791) | 5.6 years | HbA1c ≤6%; goal for HbA1c was absolute reduction of 1.5 percentage points in intensive therapy group, compared with conventional intervention group | Wellbeing, avoidance of deterioration of HbA1c, keeping levels at 8-9%, and preventing symptoms of glycosuria, hypoglycaemia, and ketonuria |
ACCORD=Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes Study; ADVANCE=Action in Diabetes and Vascular disease—PreterAx and DiamicroN MR Controlled Evaluation; HbA1c=glycated haemoglobin A1c; IDA=Insulin Diabetes Angioplasty; REMBO=Rational Effective Multicomponent Therapy in the Struggle Against DiaBetes Mellitus in Patients With COngestve Heart Failure; SMBG=self monitoring of blood glucose; UGDP=University Group Diabetes Program; UKPDS=United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study; VACSDM=Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; VADT=Veterans Affairs Diabetes Trial.
*Mean or median.
Key characteristics of participants
| Trial | Age (years)* | Duration of disease at baseline (years)* | HbA1c at baseline (%)* | Fasting blood glucose at baseline (mmol/L)*† | Previous cardiovascular disease, intensive/conventional (No) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACCORD 20084 67-74 | 62.2 | 10 | 8.3 | 9.8 | 1826/1783 |
| ADVANCE 200875-78 | 66.0 | 8.0 | 7.5 | 8.5 | 1794/1796 |
| Bagg et al 200179-82 | 55.9 | 6.9 | 10.7 | 13.5 | 2/2 |
| Becker et al 200383 84 | 63.3 | 3.3 | NR | 9.6 | 21/23 |
| IDA 200992 93 | 64.0 | 6.5 | 6.5 | 7.2 | 51/51 |
| Jaber et al 199694 | 62.4 | 6.5 | 11.9‡ | 12.0 | NR |
| Kumamoto 20007 95 96 | 49.6 | 8.6 | 9.2 | 9.2 | 0/0 |
| Lu et al 201086 | 59.5 | 8.2 | 9.0 | 9.3 | NR |
| REMBO 200885 | 64 | 5.5 | 7.2 | 6.6 | 41/40 |
| Service et al 198387 | 50.7 | 0.5 | 11.4 | 8.7 | NR |
| UGDP 197888-91 | 52.7§ | Newly diagnosed | NR | 7.9 | 7/16¶ |
| UKPDS 19981 8 97-102 | 53.2** | Newly diagnosed | 7.1** | 8.1** | 77†† |
| VA CSDM 1995103-109 | 60.1 | 7.8 | 9.4 | 11.9 | 31/27 |
| VADT 20096 110 111 | 60.4 | 11.5 | 9.4 | 10.9 | 355/368 |
ACCORD=Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes Study; ADVANCE=Action in Diabetes and Vascular disease—PreterAx and DiamicroN MR Controlled Evaluation; IDA=Insulin Diabetes Angioplasty; NR=not reported; REMBO=Rational Effective Multicomponent Therapy in the Struggle Against DiaBetes Mellitus in Patients With COngestve Heart Failure; UGDP=University Group Diabetes Program; UKPDS=United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study; VACSDM=Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; VADT=Veterans Affairs Diabetes Trial.
*Mean or median.
†Converted from mg/dL to mmol/L by dividing by 18.
‡Described as glycated haemoglobin.
§Age reported for all treatment groups together.
¶Previous cardiovascular disease reported as history of angina.
**Number for baseline characteristics taken from UKPDS 33.
††Number taken from meta-analysis by Turnbull et al.114
Risk of bias assessments of included trials
| Trial | Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting | Free from other bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ACCORD 20084 67-74 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Unclear | Adequate | Inadequate |
| ADVANCE 200875-78 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
| Bagg et al 200179-82 | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate |
| Becker et al 200383 84 | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate |
| IDA 200992 93 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
| Jaber et al 199694 | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
| Kumamoto 20007 95 96 | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Unclear | Inadequate |
| Lu et al 201086 | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate |
| REMBO 200885 | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate | Unclear |
| Service et al 198387 | Adequate | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate |
| UGDP 197888-91 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate |
| UKPDS 19981 8 97-102 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
| VA CSDM 1995103-109 | Unclear | Unclear | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
| VADT 20096 110 111 | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Adequate | Inadequate |
ACCORD=Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes Study; ADVANCE=Action in Diabetes and Vascular disease—PreterAx and DiamicroN MR Controlled Evaluation; IDA=Insulin Diabetes Angioplasty; REMBO=Rational Effective Multicomponent Therapy in the Struggle Against DiaBetes Mellitus in Patients With COngestve Heart Failure; UGDP=University Group Diabetes Program; UKPDS=United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study; VACSDM=Veterans Affairs Cooperative Study in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus; VADT=Veterans Affairs Diabetes Trial.

Fig 2 Forest plot for all cause mortality

Fig 3 Trial sequential analysis of all cause mortality. Heterogeneity adjusted required information size of 46 677 participants calculated on basis of proportion of mortality of 8.4% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 10%, α=5%, β=20%, and I2=30%. Actually accrued No of participants was 28 149, 60% of required information size. Dashed red cumulative Z curve does not cross solid blue trial sequential monitoring boundaries for benefit or harm, but boundaries for futility (blue inner wedge boundaries) are crossed. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)

Fig 4 Forest plot for cardiovascular mortality

Fig 5 Trial sequential analysis for cardiovascular mortality. Heterogeneity adjusted required information size of 129 468 participants calculated on basis of proportion of cardiovascular mortality of 4.1% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 10%, α=5%, a β=20%, and I2=46%. Actually accrued No of participants was 28 149, 22% of required information size. Dashed red cumulative Z curve does not cross solid blue trial sequential monitoring boundaries for benefit or harm. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate the traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)

Fig 6 Forest plot for non-fatal myocardial infarction

Fig 7 Trial sequential analysis for non-fatal myocardial infarction. Heterogeneity adjusted required information size of 63 446 participants calculated on basis of proportion of non-fatal myocardial infarction of 4.5% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 10%, α=5%, β=20%, and I2=0%. Actually accrued No of participants was 27 958, 44% of required information size. Dashed red cumulative Z curve does not cross solid blue trial sequential monitoring boundaries for benefit or harm. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate the traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)

Fig 8 Forest plot for composite microvascular outcome

Fig 9 Trial sequential analysis for composite microvascular outcome. Heterogeneity corrected required information size of 43 703 participants calculated on basis of proportion of composite microvascular outcome of 11.1% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 10%, α=5%, β=20%, and I2=45%. Dashed red cumulative Z curve does not cross solid blue trial sequential monitoring boundaries for benefit or harm. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate the traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)

Fig 10 Forest plot for retinopathy

Fig 11 Trial sequential analysis for retinopathy. Heterogeneity corrected required information size of 43 960 participants calculated on basis of proportion of retinopathy of 14.3% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 10%, α=5%, β=20%, and I2=59%. Actually accrued No of participants was 10 793, 25% of required information size. Dashed red cumulative Z curve does not cross solid blue trial sequential monitoring boundaries for benefit or harm. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate the traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)

Fig 12 Forest plot for nephropathy

Fig 13 Forest plot for severe hypoglycaemia

Fig 14 Trial sequential analysis for severe hypoglycaemia. Heterogeneity adjusted required information size of 36 937 participants calculated on basis of proportion of severe hypoglycaemia of 2.9% in conventional glucose control group, relative risk reduction of 30%, α=5%, β=20%, and I2=73%. Cumulative Z curve crosses trial sequential monitoring boundary, showing sufficient evidence reached for 30% increase in relative risk with targeted intensive glycaemic control. Horizontal dotted green lines illustrate the traditional level of statistical significance (P=0.05)