Management of dm in ckd

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by Dr.Sridhar DM (nephrology) MANAGEMENT OF DIABETES MELLITUS IN CKD

description

MANAGEMENT OF DM IN CKD DIFFFERS AS THE OHA SHOULD BE USED CAUTIOUSLY AND ALSO INSULIN..

Transcript of Management of dm in ckd

Page 1: Management of dm in ckd

by

Dr.Sridhar DM (nephrology)

MANAGEMENT OF DIABETES MELLITUS

IN CKD

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DIABETES:THE MOST COMMON CAUSE OF ESRD

Primary Diagnosis for Patients Who Start Dialysis

Diabetes50.1%

Hypertension27%

Glomerulonephritis

13%

Other

10% No. of patientsProjection95% CI

1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 20080

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

r2=99.8%243,524

281,355520,240

No.

of d

ialy

sis

patie

nts

(thou

sand

s)

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COMORBIDITIES

Non-diabetes Diabetes

Non-CKD

CKD

0

15

30

45

60

Non-diabetes Diabetes

Non-CKD

CKD

0

15

30

45

60

Non-diabetes Diabetes

Non-CKD

CKD

0

15

30

45

60

Non-diabetes Diabetes

Non-CKD

CKD

0

15

30

45

60

%Stroke/TIA

%ASHD %Amputation/PVD

%Heart Failure

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CAUSES OF RENAL DISEASE IN DIABETES

• Diabetic nephropathy• Renal artery stenosis• Myeloma, outflow obstruction, polycystic renal disease,

glomerulonephritis, etc• Drugs

• NSAIDS/Cox 2 inhibitors• Fibrates• ACEI, ARBs

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DIABETIC NEPHROPATHY

• 30% of all end-stage renal disease

• Increased co-morbidity and mortality – retinopathy, cardiovascular disease, stroke, peripheral vascular disease

• May be prevented/delayed by early screening and treatment

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FACTORS AFFECTING PROGRESSION OF NEPHROPATHY

• Blood pressure

• Urinary protein excretion

• (glycaemic control)

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MINIMUM SCREENING FOR RENAL DISEASE IN DIABETES

1. Annual EMU for ACR. Repeat within a month if positive, in absence of UTI/renal stones/other renal disease

2. Annual serum creatinine• Creatinine• eGFR (preferred MDRD equation)

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MICROALBUMINURIA AND PROTEINURIA

Normal Microalbuminuria Overt proteinuria

F M F M

Albumin/creatinine ratio (mg/mmol)

<3.5 <2.5 >3.5 >2.5 >30

Equivalent Albumen excretion (mg/day)

<30 30-300 300

• Diagnosis of microalbuminuria based on 2 out of 3 positive first passed morning urine samples in absence of urinary tract infection

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INITIAL ASSESSMENT OF PATIENT WITH DIABETES AND RENAL IMPAIRMENT

• Is this likely to be diabetic nephropathy?

• Presence of retinopathy

• Microalbuminuria/proteinuria

• Is this likely to be renal artery stenosis?

• Family history, Drug history, GU history etc

• AIP, myeloma screen, PSA

• Ultrasound

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METFORMIN

• Metformin has been used in low doses in patients with glomerular filtration rate (GFR) as low as 30 to 60 ml/min. It

• should not be used at a GFR below 30 ml/min -- risk for lactic acidosis.

• As renal function can deteriorate abruptly,

• better to avoid metformin once serum creatinine concentration rises above

1.5 mg/dl (132 μmo/l) in men

1.3 mg/dl (117 μmol/l) in women

ORAL HYPOGLYCEMICS

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INSULIN SECRETAGOGUES(SULFONYLUREA AND MEGLITINIDES)

• Sulphonylureas (especially gliblenclamide) may accumulate as renal function deteriorates

• can be associated with hypoglycemia

Glycosidase inhibitors• contraindicated in renal failure

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Thiazolidinediones• associated with weight gain, (fluid retention + nonfluid gains)

• patients at risk for congestive heart failure -- should be avoided.

• Concern about increased bone fracture rates in patients using thiazolidinediones,

• could potentiate CKD - related bone disease.

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• Insulin regimens are the most commonly used to control glycemia in CKD

• increasing half-life of insulin as CKD progresses, the risk for hypoglycemia increases.

• Insulin requirements decrease further in HD patients, particularly in those with residual diuresis (<500 ml/day),

• Insulin requirement often decreases by 30%

• In peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients,

• intraperitoneal insulin is more physiologic than subcutaneous, as portal absorption of insulin may better mimic the endogenous insulin effect.

• Insulin requirements typically increase by 200% to 300% in this situation

INSULIN

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INSULIN IN PT. ON HEMODIALYSIS

• Insulin inhibitors – dialyzable

• Insulin resistance diminishes after the start of dialysis.

• half-life of insulin is prolonged.

• the potential for hypoglycemia with both oral agents and insulin increases in the presence of CKD (with the exception of gliquidone and glimepiride).

• Self-monitoring of blood glucose concentration is imperative.

• Insulin requirement often decreases by ~30%

• Glargine has been shown to reduce hypoglycemia in hemodialysis patients

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BLOOD PRESSURE CONTROL

• BP reduction in type 1 & type 2 DM patients reduces rate of CKD progression

• At any given level of GFR, blood pressure tends to be higher in diabetic than in nondiabetic patients with CKD

• recommended blood pressure target 125/75 mm Hg

• Ideally – (typically takes three or four drugs to accomplish)

• start with an ACE inhibitor or ARB

• Add diuretic

• Add calcium channel blocker, β-blocker, or renin inhibitors

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(if systolic BP >20 mmHg above goal)START with ACEI or ARB/thiazide diuretic*)

If BP Still Not at Goal (125/705mm Hg)

If BP Still Not at Goal (125/75 mm Hg)

orIf used CCB, Add Other Subgroup of CCB

(ie, amlodipine-like agent if verapamil or diltiazem already being used and the converse)

OR if b blocker used add CCB

Add Vasodilator (hydralazine, minoxidil)

If BP Still Not at Goal (125/75 mm Hg)

Add Long Acting Thiazide Diuretic*

If Blood Pressure >125/75 mm Hg in Diabetes or Chronic Kidney Disease with Any Level of Albuminuria

Recheck within 2-3 weeks

Recheck within 2-3 weeks

Recheck within 4 weeks

(if systolic BP< 20 mmHg above goal)Start ARB or ACE Inhibitor titrate upwards

Add CCB or b blocker** (titrate dose upward)

Consider low dose aldosterone antagonists#

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ACEI/ARB begin at a low dose; increase dose at 4-week intervals to reduce microalbuminuriaantiproteinuric effects not necessarily attained at antihypertensive doses increase dose until proteinuria reduced by 30 to 50%

Titrate to maximal suppression of urinary albumin excretion for DM patients with persistent microalbuminuria despite intensive insulin therapy even without HTN

titration limited by adverse effects:• an acute increase in serum creatinine of 50% or more;

• renal artery stenosis;

• hypovolemia; congestive heart failure

• hyperkalemia resistant to corrective maneuvers

• ARB : consider for subjects with documented aldosterone escape

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IMPACT OF DIABETES ON DIALYSIS BLOOD PRESSURE MANAGEMENT

• Autonomic Insufficiency

• BP drops and very labile

• Medial Calcificaton

• Wide pulse pressure

• Hypertensive Cardiomyopathy

• Preload

• Cardiac function

• After load

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LIPID CONTROL

• Heart Protection Study

• Patients with DM and CKD who received statins had a 23% decrease in cardiovascular risk with an absolute event reduction of 80%

• In HD patients with type 2 DM, the addition of 20 mg of atorvastatin

• 40% decrease in lowdensity lipoprotein cholesterol levels & significant decrease in cardiac events

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DOSAGES OF STATINS IN CKD• IN PT.S ON HEMODIALYSIS AND PERITONEAL DIALYSIS

• Atorvastatin - up to 80 mg/day

• Fluvastatin – up to 80 mg/day.

• Pravastatin - limited to 10 mg, as active metabolites can accumulate,

Pravastatin Pooling Project - of up to 40 mg were safely (GFR of 30 ml/min per 1.73 m2)

• Simvastatin – upto 20 mg/day (40-mg/day in stage 3 CKD (Heart Protection Study))

• Rosuvastatin - not more than 10 mg/day when GFR falls below 30 ml/min per 1.73 m2.

• Ezetimibe - safely used (effects absorption mainly bile acid sequestrants)

• Fenofibrate - reduced by one third in CKD stage 2,

reduced by two thirds in CKD stages 3 and 4

avoided in CKD stage 5.

• Gemfibrozil - safely used, although in PD, elevated CPK levels have been reported

• Niacin (Sustained-release) - should be decreased by 50% at CKD stage 5

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• DIET IN CKD PT.S WITH DM• Diabetic patients with renal failure are often severely catabolic

and tend to develop malnutrition

• Reduction of dietary protein intake to 0.8 g/kg body weight for CKD Stages 1–4 is recommended

• Increase protien intake >1.2g/kg in HD >2.0g/kg in PD

• ANEMIA

• Anemia occurs at an earlier stage of CKD in DM patients and is often more severe

• Erythropoietin - Anemia associated with CKD

• In DM - higher dosages compared with nonDM pt.s

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• Diabetic patients with CKD develop secondary hyperparathyroidism at a slower rate than nondiabetics

• predisposed to low-turnover (adynamic) bone disease - risk factor for cardiovascular calcification

• care should be taken to avoid calcium loading.

• Accumulate aluminum more readily and are more susceptible to aluminum-induced bone disease.

• Aluminum containing phosphate binders should always be avoided in the diabetic patient with advanced CKD

• Target serum phosphorus goal

• < 5.5 mg/dl in patients with Stage 5 CKD

• < 4.6 mg/dl in Stage 3–4 CKD.

• if the i-PTH is abnormal - evaluate for vitamin D deficiency

• measurement of 25-hydroxy vitamin D.

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DIABETIC MANAGEMENT IN CKD

Parameter

• Lower BP………………………

• Block RAAS……………………

• Improve glycemia …………….

• Lower LDL cholesterol………..

• Anemia management ………...

• Endothelial protection…………

• Smoking………………………..

Target

< 125/75 mmHg

ACEi or ARB to max tolerated

A1c < 6.5% (Insulin/TZD)

< 100 (70) mg/dl statin + other

Hb 11-12 g/dl (Epo + iron)

Aspirin daily

Cessation

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RENAL REPLACEMENT THERAPY IN CKD WITH DM• Start dialysis at eGFR - 15 ml/min per 1.73 m2 (normally - eGFR <7-8)

• they tend to tolerate uremia poorly and frequently have sodium retention and fluid overload.

• Peritoneal dialysis–associated glucose loading • Replace glucose solutions in part by amino acid solutions and polyglucose.

• Loss of solute and water transport often limits long-term use of peritoneal dialysis to 3 to 5 years.

• Switching to hemodialysis should be considered before volume overload or uremic symptoms occur

• Pt.s on PD, Glucose meters based on GLUCOSE OXIDASE TEST should be used • maltose and polyglucose present in PD solution, affect glucose

dehydrogenase–based glucose meters

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TRANSPLANTS

• Type 1 DM - pancreas transplant

• Can induce regression of moderate Diabetic Nephropathy lesions in native kidneys

• but only during a period of 10 years after transplantation.

• Pancreas transplantation at the time of renal transplantation

• Prevents / slows the development of Diabetic Nephropathy in the transplanted kidney.

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Thank you