Heller T, Reise K, Roth J, Lehmann T, Schiel R, Lorkowski S, Müller UA, Müller N. Changes in Quality of Diabetes Care and Morbidity over 20 Years in People with Type 1 Diabetes and Long Diabetes Duration: The JEVIN Trial.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2016;
125:122-129. [PMID:
28008584 DOI:
10.1055/s-0042-117717]
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Abstract
Background: The JEVIN trial started as a cross-sectional study in 1989/90 in Jena, a city of the former German Democratic Republic. At that time, the centralized diabetes care system was broken down and restarted 10 years later; structured treatment and teaching programs were implemented, blood glucose self-monitoring, insulin pump-systems and analogue insulin were introduced. We surveyed people with type-1-diabetes of the baseline JEVIN trial in a 20-year follow-up. Methods: 131 patients with type-1-diabetes were analyzed in 1989/90. Of the living population in 2009/10 (n=104), 83 persons were identified and 75 persons with a mean diabetes duration of 35 years were reexamined regarding HbA1c, self-monitoring, diabetes therapy, severe hypoglycemia, diabetic late complications and compared with the results of the same persons in 1989/90. Results: HbA1c decreased from 57.1 mmol/mol in 1989/90 to 52.7 mmol/mol in 2009/10 (7.4 -7.0%; p=0.049). Self-monitoring of blood glucose increased from 2 to 35 tests/week (p<0.001). 100%-use of animal insulin changed to human and analogue insulin therapy. The incidence of severe hypoglycemia increased from 0.1 to 0.16/patient-year. Retinopathy increased from 29 to 69% (p<0.001), nephropathy from 5 to 27% (p<0.001) and neuropathy from 13 to 43% (p<0.001). 17% had no diabetic late complications. Conclusions: The JEVIN trial shows a significant improve in HbA1c in the past 20 years. Severe hypoglycemia occurred rarely and 17% were still free of any diabetic late complication after 35 years of diabetes. This indicates a good quality of diabetes care in a German setting.
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