Several intervention trials found that some antihypertensive drugs, mostly ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers, are associated to a lesser risk of developing diabetes mellitus in comparison with other drug classes, including diuretics and β-blockers. This finding is clinically relevant because it has been demonstrated that patients who develop new-onset diabetes during therapy rapidly become a high-risk population, not dissimilar from patients with prior diagnosis of diabetes. In a recent analysis of the PIUMA (Progetto Ipertensione Umbria Monitoraggio Ambulatoriale) study, pre-treatment glucose levels and use of diuretic drugs were independent predictors of new-onset diabetes. Although there is some controversy on this topic, prevention of new-onset diabetes could contribute to explain at least part of the benefit attributed to ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers in some intervention trials. In clinical practice, when faced with subjects at high risk of diabetes, it is important to implement non-pharmacological strategies whenever appropriate (diet, physical activity, weight loss). In these subjects, ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers could be considered first-line drugs. © 2008 Adis Data Information BV. All rights reserved.
The clinical significance of new-onset diabetes mellitus in hypertension: Drug-induced diabetes is important
Angeli F.;
2008-01-01
Abstract
Several intervention trials found that some antihypertensive drugs, mostly ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers, are associated to a lesser risk of developing diabetes mellitus in comparison with other drug classes, including diuretics and β-blockers. This finding is clinically relevant because it has been demonstrated that patients who develop new-onset diabetes during therapy rapidly become a high-risk population, not dissimilar from patients with prior diagnosis of diabetes. In a recent analysis of the PIUMA (Progetto Ipertensione Umbria Monitoraggio Ambulatoriale) study, pre-treatment glucose levels and use of diuretic drugs were independent predictors of new-onset diabetes. Although there is some controversy on this topic, prevention of new-onset diabetes could contribute to explain at least part of the benefit attributed to ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers in some intervention trials. In clinical practice, when faced with subjects at high risk of diabetes, it is important to implement non-pharmacological strategies whenever appropriate (diet, physical activity, weight loss). In these subjects, ACE inhibitors, calcium-channel blockers and angiotensin II receptor blockers could be considered first-line drugs. © 2008 Adis Data Information BV. All rights reserved.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.