The use of antidiabetic medications in community-dwelling diabetic patients in Shanghai in 2018
10.3760/cma.j.issn.1000-6699.2019.11.007
- VernacularTitle: 2018年上海社区糖尿病用药调查
- Author:
Xiaoman CHEN
1
;
Ningjian WANG
;
Yi CHEN
;
Chunfang ZHU
;
Chenyu CAO
;
Abudukerimu BUATIKAMU
;
Wen ZHANG
;
Yingli LU
Author Information
1. Department of Endocrinology, the Ninth People′s Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiaotong University School of Medicine, Shanghai 200011, China
- Publication Type:Clinical Trail
- Keywords:
HbA1C;
Fasting blood glucose;
Body mass index;
Antidiabetic drugs
- From:
Chinese Journal of Endocrinology and Metabolism
2019;35(11):955-961
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective:To investigate the use of diabetes medications and their effects on the community diabetic patients in Shanghai, China, and provide the evidence for the use of antidiabetic drugs in diabetic patients in the region.
Methods:The data were from a database of a 2018 Survey on Community Diabetes Mellitus in Shanghai, China. There were 4 612 subjects included in this cross-sectional study in 2018. According to the use of antidiabetic drugs, the population was divided into untreated group, single drug group, double drugs combination group and multi-drugs combination group, to compare the fasting blood glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, BMI and prevalence of diabetic complications in different groups.
Results:About 70.9% of the 4 612 patients used hypoglycemic agents, 34.8% used metformin, 35.1% used sulfonylureas, 22.9% used alpha glycosidase inhibitors, and 13.8% used insulin. The prevalence of diabetic nephropathy, retinopathy, neuropathy, stroke, and diabetic foot was higher in the combination than in the untreated and single-drug users (P<0.01). Only 41.3% subjects had HbA1C<7%. The fasting blood glucose and HbA1C values were lower in the untreated group than in other three medication groups, and the rate of the HbA1C reaching target in the untreated group was higher than the other medication groups (P<0.01). As the types of drug increased, HbA1C was less likely to reach the target (P<0.01). There were 42.2% of patients with BMI<24 kg/m2, and there was no significant difference in the proportion of BMI reaching target among the four groups (P>0.05).
Conclusion:The most common used antidiabetic drugs in diabetic patients in Shanghai are metformin, sulfonylureas, α-glycosides inbibitor, and insulin. The blood glucose control in diabetic patients in Shanghai community is not good enough. Patients with a longer duration of diabetes, a lower rate of HbA1C at goal, and a higher prevalence of diabetic complications may be more prone to use multiple hypoglycemic drugs.