Jacobson Alan M, Musen Gail, Ryan Christopher M, Silvers Nancy, Cleary Patricia, Waberski Barbara, Burwood Amanda, Weinger Katie, Bayless Meg, Dahms William, Harth Judith
N Engl J Med. 2007 May 3;356(18):1842-52. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa066397.
Long-standing concern about the effects of type 1 diabetes on cognitive ability has increased with the use of therapies designed to bring glucose levels close to the nondiabetic range and the attendant increased risk of severe hypoglycemia.
A total of 1144 patients with type 1 diabetes enrolled in the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) and its follow-up Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications (EDIC) study were examined on entry to the DCCT (at mean age 27 years) and a mean of 18 years later with the same comprehensive battery of cognitive tests. Glycated hemoglobin levels were measured and the frequency of severe hypoglycemic events leading to coma or seizures was recorded during the follow-up period. We assessed the effects of original DCCT treatment-group assignment, mean glycated hemoglobin values, and frequency of hypoglycemic events on measures of cognitive ability, with adjustment for age at baseline, sex, years of education, length of follow-up, visual acuity, self-reported sensory loss due to peripheral neuropathy, and (to control for the effects of practice) the number of cognitive tests taken in the interval since the start of the DCCT.
Forty percent of the cohort reported having had at least one hypoglycemic coma or seizure. Neither frequency of severe hypoglycemia nor previous treatment-group assignment was associated with decline in any cognitive domain. Higher glycated hemoglobin values were associated with moderate declines in motor speed (P=0.001) and psychomotor efficiency (P<0.001), but no other cognitive domain was affected.
No evidence of substantial long-term declines in cognitive function was found in a large group of patients with type 1 diabetes who were carefully followed for an average of 18 years, despite relatively high rates of recurrent severe hypoglycemia. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00360893.)
随着旨在使血糖水平接近非糖尿病范围的治疗方法的使用以及随之而来的严重低血糖风险增加,人们对1型糖尿病对认知能力的影响的长期担忧有所增加。
共有1144名1型糖尿病患者参加了糖尿病控制与并发症试验(DCCT)及其后续的糖尿病干预与并发症流行病学(EDIC)研究,在进入DCCT时(平均年龄27岁)以及平均18年后接受了相同的一套全面认知测试。测量糖化血红蛋白水平,并记录随访期间导致昏迷或癫痫发作的严重低血糖事件的发生频率。我们评估了DCCT原始治疗组分配、平均糖化血红蛋白值和低血糖事件发生频率对认知能力测量指标的影响,并对基线年龄、性别、受教育年限、随访时间、视力、因周围神经病变导致的自我报告感觉丧失以及(为控制练习效应)自DCCT开始以来间隔期内进行的认知测试数量进行了调整。
40%的队列报告至少有一次低血糖昏迷或癫痫发作。严重低血糖的发生频率和先前的治疗组分配均与任何认知领域的下降无关。较高的糖化血红蛋白值与运动速度(P=0.001)和精神运动效率(P<0.001)的中度下降相关,但其他认知领域未受影响。
在一大群平均被仔细随访18年的1型糖尿病患者中,未发现认知功能有实质性长期下降的证据,尽管复发性严重低血糖的发生率相对较高。(ClinicalTrials.gov编号,NCT00360893。)