Intense treatment doesn`t help diabetics: Study
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Intense treatment doesn`t help diabetics: Study

Last Updated: Monday, March 15, 2010,00:00
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Intense treatment doesn`t help diabetics: Study
Atlanta: Key results from a landmark federal study are in, and the results are disappointing for diabetics: Adding drugs to drive blood pressure and blood-fats lower than current targets did not prevent heart problems, and in some cases caused harmful side effects.



A decade ago, the federal government launched the three-part study to see whether intensely lowering blood sugar, blood pressure, or fats in the blood would reduce heart attacks and strokes in diabetics. The first piece of the study — about blood sugar — was stopped two years ago, when researchers saw more instead of less risk with that approach. Now, the other two parts of the study are in.



What should diabetics do? Focus on healthy diets and lifestyles, and take tried-and-true medicines that doctors recommend now to control health risks, said several experts, including Dr. Clyde Yancy, a Baylor University cardiologist and president of the American Heart Association.



The studies were presented Sunday at an American College of Cardiology conference and published on the Internet by the New England Journal of Medicine.



They involve people with Type 2 diabetes — the most common form and the one rising because of the obesity epidemic. Diabetics have more than double the risk of dying of heart attacks or strokes than people without the disease.



For the blood-fat study, researchers led by Columbia University`s Dr. Henry Ginsburg recruited more than 5,500 diabetics who also had another health risk, such as high blood pressure or cholesterol.



All were given a statin — cholesterol-lowering pills sold as Lipitor and Zocor that have long been known to save lives. Half also were given Abbott Laboratories` blockbuster drug, TriCor; the rest got dummy pills. TriCor is a fibrate, a drug that lowers blood fats called triglycerides while boosting "good" cholesterol.



Nearly five years later, the groups had similar rates of heart attacks and strokes, although people with very high blood fats seemed to benefit from TriCor.
There also were signs of a gender difference — TriCor seemed to help men but appeared to possibly harm women, by raising the chance they would suffer a heart problem compared to women taking dummy pills."It`s hard to know what to make of these trends," said Dr. Jorge Plutzky, preventive cardiology chief at Brigham and Women`s Hospital in Boston. He had no role in the study and has consulted for a variety of drug makers, as have many of the researchers involved in the work.



PTI
First Published: Monday, March 15, 2010, 00:00

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