T2DM Flashcards
When / how to screen for T2DM?
AUSDRISK every 3 years after 40yo
vs FG or A1c annually if ATSI after 18yo
vs FG or A1c every 3 years if known to be high risk
What are the 10 components of AUSDRISK?
- Age (increasing)
- Gender (male)
- Ethnicity - ATSI/PI/Maori or Asian/Indian/Middle Eastern/North African/Southern European
- FHx diabetes
- PHx elevated glucose
- HTN on medication
- Smoking
- Low fruit/vegetable intake
- Low physical activity
- Waist circumference >110cm for men or 100cm for women
Who is at high risk of T2DM and when should they be screened?
Age ≥40 + BMI ≥25
AUSDRISK ≥12
PHx CVD event/GDM/PCOS
Pt on anti-psychotics
FG or A1c every 3 years
What are the diagnostic criteria for impaired glucose tolerance and impaired fasting glucose?
When should these people be screened?
2hr glucose 7.8-11 and/or FG 6.1-6.9
Annually w FG or A1c
Cut-offs for diabetes diagnostic tests (FG, A1c, OGTT)
FG <5.5 = diabetes unlikely
FG 5.5-6.9 = diabetes possible
FG ≥7 or RBG ≥11.1 = diabetes likely, repeat test
A1c <6 = diabetes unlikely
A1c ≥ 6.5% = diabetes
OGTT FG ≥7 or 2hr ≥11.1 = diabetes
FG 6.1-6.9 = impaired fasting glucose
2hr 7.8-11 = impaired glucose tolerance
2hr <7.8 = normal
What is the difference between diagnosing diabetes in asymptomatic vs symptomatic patients?
Single diagnostic result required for symptomatic pts (vs. repeat test required for ASx pts)
When should we consider DDx T1DM?
(think of 6)
Ketosis/ketonuria
Polyuria / polydipsia
Acute weight loss (>5% in <4/52)
<50yo
PHx or FHx auto-immune disease
Acute onset of Sx
Name 6 self-management goals for T2DM
- Balanced diet per the Australian Dietary Guidelines
- 150mins aerobic exercise + 2-3 resistance training sessions (totalling ≥60mins) per week
- At least 5-10% LoW if BMI ≥25
- 0 cigarettes per day
- ≤2 std drinks per day
- FG 4-7; post-prandial 5-10
When is self-monitoring of blood glucose recommended in T2DM?
Pt on insulin or SU
Pts having difficulty achieving glycaemic control
For monitoring of BGL arising from intercurrent illness
During pre-pregnancy and pregnancy Mx
When clinical need requires monitoring
ie. NOT routinely if low risk
What are clinical management targets for T2DM?
A1c
ACR
Lipids
BP
A1c - ≤7 usually, ≤6.5 if young, >7 if elderly/comorbid - check every 3-12 months
ACR ≤2.5 for men and ≤3.5 for women - check yearly
Lipids TC <4, TG <2, LDL <2 (1.8 if existing CVD), HDL ≥1 - check yearly
BP ≤140/90, lower if younger and tolerated - check each visit
What health checks should people w T2DM have? How often?
Maintain immunisations: Influenza, Pneumococcal, dTpa +/- Hep B (if travelling) and Herpes Zoster
Eyes: retinopathy check at Dx then 1-2yrly
Peripheral neuropathy: 10g monofilament (small fibres) + vibration sense (large fibres) at Dx then yearly
Kidneys: eGFR + ACR at least annually
T2DM management algorithm:
First line
Dual therapy
Multiple therapies
First line:
- Weight loss ≥10%
- Metformin (SU is not preferred)
Dual:
- SGLT2i or GLP1 preferred for CVD/CKD risk reduction
vs. DPP4i (if SGLT2i or GLP1 not tolerated / CI)
vs. SU (not preferred due to risk of hypoglycaemia) or insulin
Multiple:
- Options inc. SGLT2i, GLP1, DPP4i, SU and insulin
- Review meds that haven’t reduced A1c by ≥0.5%
- SGLT2i + GLP1 cannot both be covered by PBS
- Cannot use GLP1 + DPP4i together
Metformin - class, MoA, CI, AEs, dosing, cost
Class - Biguanide
MoA - Reduces hepatic glucose output + lowers FG
CI - eGFR <30, severe hepatic impairment
AEs - GI upset, lactic acidosis
Dosing - Start at low dose and up-titrate, available in slow release
Cost - PBS general schedule
Gliclazide - class, MoA, CI, AEs, dosing, cost
Class - Sulfonylurea
MoA - Triggers insulin release independent of glucose
CI - Severe renal or hepatic impairment
AEs - Weight gain
Dosing - Start at low dose and up-titrate, available in slow release
Cost - PBS general schedule
Other drugs inc. glibenclamide, glimepiride, glipizide
Gliptins - class, MoA, CI, AEs, dosing, cost
Class - Dipeptidylpeptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors
MoA - Increases availability of GLP1 (which stimulates B-cell insulin release)
CI - Pancreatitis
AEs - GI upset, rash, pancreatitis
Dosing - Reduce dose in renal impairment (except for linagliptin)
Cost - PBS subsidised for use w metformin, SU or insulin; DPP4i + metformin allows SGLT2i subsidy
Examples: alogliptin, linagliptin, saxagliptin, sitagliptin, vildagliptin