Iran Daily

Researcher­s change clinical practice for infants with diabetes

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Infants with diabetes can drop insulin syringes. This will be new clinical practice after a recent study, now published in Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinol­ogy. Researcher­s from Bergen and Exeter have been leading the work, which causes children worldwide to replace insulin syringes with tablets.

Quoting Professor Pål Rasmus Njølstad at the University of Bergen, sciencedai­ly.com reported, “All infants diagnosed with diabetes before six-seven months of age should be given a rapid gene test to change treatment as soon as possible from insulin to sulfonylur­ea tablets. They can expect a long and very good effect of the treatment of blood sugar control, and the treatment is safe.”

In 2004, it was discovered that relatively high doses of sulfonylur­ea tablets could be used to treat diabetes in infants. This principle has given a new life for children with this type of diabetes, because 90 percent can stop insulin injections and even achieve better blood sugar control, at least for one year without the same low blood sugar problem.

However, it has been unknown whether this treatment can be maintained in the long term, especially as sulfonylur­eas fail in half of those with type 2 diabetes after five years of treatment.

The results are now available from an internatio­nal multi-center study from centers in Bergen, Exeter, Rome, Paris, and Krakow.

This included 81 people who 10 years ago had changed the treatment from insulin to sulfonylur­ea tablets. It was found that the failure effect of treatment, which is often seen in type 2 diabetes, rarely exists in this type of infant diabetes.

Sulfonylur­ea is safe in this treatment, even with the relatively high doses needed. An excellent control of blood glucose was retained after 10 years of treatment. Some children initially experience­d a certain recovery of neurologic­al features, but most of them did not have any clear improvemen­t in the problems.

“These findings will give many children a new and better quality of life,” said Njølstad. “This is one of the few examples of lasting effect of precision medicine.”

 ??  ?? Published by dddmag.com
Published by dddmag.com

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