Conference Coverage

Dubious diagnosis: Is there a better way to define ‘prediabetes’?


 

AT IDF WORLD DIABETES CONGRESS 2022

Whom should we throw the kitchen sink at?

Some of this discussion, Dr. Kirkman said, “is really a philosophical one, especially when you consider that lifestyle intervention has benefits for almost everyone on many short- and long-term outcomes.”

“The question is probably whom we should ‘throw the kitchen sink at,’ who should get more scalable advice that might apply to everyone regardless of glycemic levels, and whether there’s some more intermediate group that needs more of a [National Diabetes Prevention Program] approach.”

Dr. Selvin’s group is now working on gathering data to inform development of a risk-based prediabetes definition. “We have a whole research effort in this area. I hope that with some really strong data on risk in prediabetes, that can help to solve the heterogeneity issue. I’m focused on bringing evidence to bear to change the guidelines.”

In the meantime, she told this news organization, “I think there are things we can do now to provide more guidance. I get a lot of feedback from people saying things like ‘my physician told me I have prediabetes but now I don’t’ or ‘I saw in my labs that my blood sugar is elevated but my doctor never said anything.’ That’s a communications issue where we can do a better job.”

The meeting was sponsored by the International Diabetes Federation.

Dr. Selvin is deputy editor of Diabetes Care and on the editorial board of Diabetologia. She receives funding from the NIH and the Foundation for the NIH, and royalties from UpToDate for sections related to screening, diagnosis, and laboratory testing for diabetes. Dr. Kirkman reports no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

The bionic pancreas triumphs in pivotal trial
MDedge Pediatrics
Does COVID-19 cause type 1 diabetes in children? Time will tell
MDedge Pediatrics
FDA approves first-ever agent to delay type 1 diabetes onset
MDedge Pediatrics
Medical school culinary medicine programs grow despite limited funding
MDedge Pediatrics
With type 1 diabetes delay possible, focus now on screening
MDedge Pediatrics
Diabetes decision tool yields ‘modest’ benefit in low-resource clinics
MDedge Pediatrics
Cold water immersion can have benefits
MDedge Pediatrics
FDA okays Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitoring system
MDedge Pediatrics
Not all children with type 2 diabetes have obesity
MDedge Pediatrics
Fitbit figures: More steps per day cut type 2 diabetes risk
MDedge Pediatrics