CF Related Diabetes - American Association of Diabetes Educators
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Transcript CF Related Diabetes - American Association of Diabetes Educators
CF Related Diabetes
ADEU
November 2010
Cystic Fibrosis
Genetic disorder
Exocrine pancreas dysfunction
Autosomal recessive inheritance
Several identified genes
Presentation
Newborn screening
Failure to thrive in infancy
Chronic pulmonary disease in older individuals
Cystic Fibrosis
Treatment
Nutritional support
High caloric diet- carbohydrate and protein
Exocrine pancreatic enzymes
Pulmonary toilet
Monitor and aggressively treat pulmonary infection
Course
Failure to thrive/ poor growth
Progressive pulmonary disease
Diabetes
Early death due to pulmonary disease
Genetic testing has demonstrated significant variability in
presentation and course
History of CF
1980s
Children and Teens died of respiratory failure
Diabetes was a pre-morbid event
1990s
Aggressive nutritional support
Extended lifespan
Increased incidence of diabetes
<25% of patients with CFRD reach age of 30 years vs
60% of those without
2000s
Increased life span, Average life expectancy 37.4 yrs
Impact of diabetes?
Incidence of CFRD
CFRD increases with age
2% children
19% adolescents
40-50% adults
Normal OGTT (standard definition)
60% children
30% of adults 20-40 years
20% of adults > 40 years
CFRD – Etiology
Originally hypothesized to be due to fibrosis
and destruction of islet cells in pancreas
Autopsy data demonstrated that CF patients
with AND without diabetes had the same islet
cell mass
Family history of type 2 diabetes increases
the risk of CFRD
Genetic predisposition towards type 2
diabetes?
Impact of Diabetes in CF
Insulin deficiency
Catabolic state- malnutrition
Until recently focus has been here
Hyperglycemia
Airway glucose concentrations increased
Immune function
Long term complications
Microvascular disease in CFRD is less common and
less severe in CF
Not described in CF patients without fasting
hyperglycemia
Impact of Diabetes on CF patients
CF patients die of pulmonary disease rather
than atherosclerotic cardiac disease
Insulin deficiency
Poor nutrition is linked to decline in pulmonary
function
Insulin is anabolic involved in conservation of
lean body mass and weight
Patients with IGT (on OGTT) have more rapid
decline in pulmonary function than NGT
CFRD without fasting hyperglycemia is bad
prognostic indicator
Definition of CFRD
Same as the ADA definition
Oral glucose tolerance test
Glucose load is low compared to normal intake
Random glucose over 200mg/dl and
symptoms
Overnight tube feedings may make it hard to see
symptoms
Is this the best or right definition for CF?
CFRD- how to define it?
“Normal glucose tolerance” on OGTT
Increased 30, 60, and 90 minute glucoses
Increase area under the curve glucose
CGMS
Mean glucose levels higher in CF (106 vs 92
mg/dl)
33% of CF patients had a glucose >200 mg/dl
(vs 5% of control patients) / day
Risk of Diabetes in CF
Family history of type 2 diabetes increases risk to CF
patients
OR- 3.1 (p = 0.009)
Sibling-twin data from a study on type 2 diabetes
demonstrated genetic component
Concordance rate for monozygotic twins higher than
dizygotic twins or sib pairs (p=0.002)
Genetic variant associated with Type 2 commonly
found in CFRD
Presence associated with earlier age of diagnosis of
diabetes
TCF7L2 = transcriprtion factor 7-like 2
Etiology of CFRD
Originally thought to be due to purely
mechanical issues
Destruction of pancreas, loss of ß cell mass
Autopsy data demonstrated essentially
equivalent mass in non-diabetic CF and
diabetic CF patients
Autopsy data demonstrated amyloid deposits
similar to that seen in type 2 DM patients but
not in type 1 nor in pancreatitis patients
Hyperglycemia in CF
OGTT demonstrates glucose “area under the curve”
is higher in non-diabetic CF patients than controls
matched for for age and BMI
Higher 30, 60 and 90 minute glucose levels
CGMS demonstrates CF patients with normal OGTT
have “diabetic” glucose values in normal life
Average glucose higher (106 vs 92 mg/dl)
33% of CF patients had one or more glucose over 200
mg/dl vs 5% of controls
Hgb A1C and OGTT may underestimate glucose
abnormalities in CF patients
Hyperglycemia in CF
Blood glucose over 144 mg/dl associated with
increased airway glucose levels
CGMS demonstrates levels higher than this 50% of the
time in CFRD, 6% of the time in CF with normal GT,
and 1% of the time in controls
Staph aureus and Pseudomonas growth was
accelerated when cultured in a similar glucose
environment
Potential impact: increased bacterial growth,
increased glycation products, increased inflammatory
process, decrased immune function
CFRD
Increases with age
2% of children, 50% of adults
At younger ages, more individuals have
normal fasting glucose (CFRD FH-)
Mortality is decreasing (1992-7 vs 2003-8)
Pre-screening, mortality was 20% within 5
years of diagnosis, now 3%
Lung function continues to be worse in CFRD
patients
When to Treat CFRD
Macrovascular complications really aren’t seen in CF
Microvascular complications are seen in CFRD FH+
What about CFRD FH Multicenter trial of CFRD FH-, IGT
Oral replaglinide, pre-meal insulin aspart, oral placebo
End point BMI
Pre-treatment BMI decreased in all groups, reversed in
insulin group only
No difference in pulmonary function over 1 year but
study time frame is likely too short to see difference
Diagnosis and Treatment
Oral glucose tolerance test
End point
Area under the curve?
CFRD FH+
Basal-bolus insulin similar to type 1 DM
Consider Insulin pump
CFRD FH
Watch BMI trajectory
Consider pre-meal bolus insulin
Summary
CFRD is a significant contributor to burden of
disease in CF
Increased illness, earlier death
CFRD may look more like type 2 diabetes
than type 1 and may have identifiable risk
factors
Appropriate diagnosis and timing of
intervention is a work in progress
Therapy is classic basal-bolus insulin