WASHINGTON—Aggressive blood sugar control does not improve survival in diabetic patients with kidney failure; therefore, physicians should individualize blood sugar targets for these patients and not rely on recommendations based on studies in the general population, according to a study appearing online July 29 in the Clinical Journal of the American Society Nephrology (CJASN).
Uncontrolled blood sugar levels can cause serious health problems for diabetic patients with kidney failure; however, studies provide conflicting results on the benefits and risks of aggressive blood sugar control in these individuals, according to the researchers.
Mark Williams, MD, of the Joslin Diabetes Center and his colleagues studied 24,875 dialysis patients for a maximum of three years of follow-up and found that only sustained extremes—either high or low—in blood sugar levels increased patients’ risk of dying prematurely.
Type 2 diabetes patients with hemoglobin A1c levels (a measure of average blood sugar levels) greater than 11 percent were particularly at risk, with a 21 percent increased likelihood of dying during the study. In the small (5.5 percent) subgroup of patients with type 1 diabetes, those with hemoglobin A1c levels greater than 9 percent had a 52 percent increased risk of dying during the study.
“In the absence of randomized, controlled trials, these results suggest that aggressive [blood sugar] control cannot be routinely recommended for all diabetic hemodialysis patients on the basis of reducing mortality risk,” the authors concluded. They encouraged physicians who treat diabetic patients with kidney failure to individualize blood sugar targets based on the potential risks and benefits for each patient.
In reviewing the results of this study in an accompanying editorial, Joachim Ix, MD, of the University of California, San Diego, and Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System noted that “to date, there are no data available from randomized clinical trials targeting different hemoglobin A1c levels and powered for cardiovascular events or mortality in end-stage renal disease populations. In their absence, the marked statistical power and elegant analyses provided by these… investigators provide useful insights.”
Ix agreed that individualized hemoglobin A1c targets might be more appropriate than a one-size-fits all target.