Management of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus in the Very Elderly: One Practice’s Experience

Elsevier

Available online 24 March 2023

Endocrine PracticeAuthor links open overlay panel, ABSTRACTObjective

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) affects 25% of adults over age 65. Nevertheless, few clinical trials include patients over age 75.

Methods

This case series reports retrospective data on a cohort of 85 patients aged 80 and over (mean 88.1, range 80-104) with T2DM, managed by a single endocrinologist. The practice’s computerized data base was searched for all patients 80 years of age and older with a diagnosis of T2DM.

Results

The major observations were the significant decrease in the use of agents associated with hypoglycemia, (sulfonylureas and insulin), and the beneficial and well-tolerated use of glucagon like peptide-1 receptor analogues (GLP-1 RA). The mean A1c in the entire cohort dropped from 7.6% to 6.6% over a mean of 9 months.

Nearly one-half of the cohort were treated with GLP1-RA, reflecting studies demonstrating the safety and efficacy of this class of drugs in less elderly patients. At presentation, 75% were on sulfonylurea and/or insulin; this number was reduced to 27%. Furthermore, none of the patients required short-acting (bolus) insulin to achieve the individualized A1c target.

Conclusion

Patients with T2DM aged 80 and over respond well to GLP1-RA drugs, drastically reducing the need for agents associated with hypoglycemia. The important question, which will require larger and prospective studies, is whether the lowering of A1c, as shown in this paper, and the use of GLP-1 RA specifically, are associated with improved morbidity and mortality in the very elderly.

Key words

Type 2 diabetes

elderly

GLP-1 receptor analogues

FibroScan hypothyroidism

hyperparathyroidism

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© 2023 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the AACE.

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