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Effects of Disease Management on Development of End Stage Renal Disease in Type 2 Diabetic Patients With Nephropathy

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
DM Nephropathy
Registration Number
NCT00309127
Lead Sponsor
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Brief Summary

Disease management using a multidisciplinary team to achieve and maintain optimal metabolic and cardiovascular risk factors control in Type 2 diabetic patients with nephropathy reduces the incidence of end stage renal disease (ESRD) and improves clinical outcomes compared to usual clinic-based care

Detailed Description

Diabetic patients consume over 10% of health care costs in most developed countries. Over 80% of these resources are used to treat diabetic complications and late stage diseases. Over 30% of patients admitted to the medical wards in Hong Kong's public hospitals have diabetes, mainly due to cardiovascular and renal complications. Diabetes is now the leading cause of end stage renal disease (ESRD), accounting for 30-50% of patients on renal replacement therapy (RRT). In Hong Kong, the number of patients receiving RRT have increased by 50% in the last 5 years but the number of patients with ESRD due to diabetes have doubled. Between 10% and 15% of patients attending medical clinics in local public hospitals either receive insulin or anti-diabetic drugs. In both community and hospital settings, between 30% and 50% of diabetic patients have albuminuria, which is by far the most powerful predictor for early mortality, cardiovascular morbidity and renal disease. Local published data show that 3-10% of diabetic patients died or developed clinical endpoints yearly.

There are now overwhelming evidence supporting the beneficial effects of optimal control of cardiovascular risk factors on clinical outcomes in diabetic patients. However, there are few studies to examine the most effective way to translate these scientific evidence collected in closely monitored clinical trial situations into daily clinical practice. Results from this multi-centre, randomized study will provide important information to health care policy makers regarding the cost effectiveness of disease management using a multidisciplinary team to deliver a structured care model in light of the growing diabetes epidemic and the constraints of finite resources and the need for equity.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
205
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Type 2 diabetic patients with ages between 35 and 75 years (inclusive) and defined according to the 1998 WHO criteria and no history of unprovoked ketosis and not requiring continuous insulin treatment within 1 year of diagnosis
  2. Plasma creatinine 150-350 mmol/l (inclusive) who had no microscopic haematuria and no ultrasonographic evidence of obstructive uropathy which is amenable to surgical intervention
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Exclusion Criteria
  1. patients with malignancy or other life-threatening diseases
  2. ultrasonographic evidence of obstructive uropathy which is amenable to surgical intervention
  3. non-diabetes related renal disease such as glomerulonephritis proven on renal biopsy reversible kidney disease, to be ruled out by ultrasonographic examination
  4. patients with clinically unstable psychiatric illnesses
  5. Patients who have 2 consecutive values of plasma creatinine concentration which differ by more than 20% within 3 months prior to recruitment.
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Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Death and/or ESRD defined as need for dialysis or plasma creatinine 500mmol/lMay 2003 - Dec 2007
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Composite cardiovascular endpoints (acute myocardial infarction, revascularisation procedures, heart failure or unstable angina or arrhythmia requiring hospital admissions, lower extremity amputation)May 2003 - Dec 2007
Number of hospital admissions, total number of days of hospital stay and attendance at the Accident and Emergency DepartmentMay 2003 - Dec 2007

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

🇨🇳

Hong Kong, China

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