Researchers identified all patients with type II diabetes and no known hospitalisation for dementia who were registered in the Swedish National Diabetes Registry between January 2004 and December 2012
A study of 350,000 patients with type II diabetes shows that those with poor blood sugar control have 50 per cent higher risk of being admitted to hospital in future for dementia as those with good control. The research, which suggests improving blood sugar control could prevent many cases of dementia, is by Dr Aidin Rawshani, National Diabetes Register and Institute of Medicine, Gothenburg, Sweden, and colleagues, and is presented at this year’s annual meeting of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) in Stockholm.
Evidence is growing that diabetes increases the risk of future declines in brain function. However, there have as yet been no studies on how blood sugar control, as measured by glycated haemoglobin or HbA1c, affects the risk of a future dementia diagnosis. In this study, the authors studied extensive clinical data to explore the association between HbA1c and the risk of hospitalisation for dementia among persons with type II diabetes.
The researchers identified all patients with type II diabetes and no known hospitalisation for dementia who were registered in the Swedish National Diabetes Registry between January 2004 and December 2012. These patients were followed up until hospital admission for dementia, death, or end of follow-up on December 31, 2012. Computer modelling was used to calculate the link between HbA1c and dementia, which also adjusted for variables including age, sex, duration of diabetes, marital status, income, education, smoking status, systolic blood pressure, body mass index, estimated kidney function, statins, levels of urine in protein, type of diabetes medication, atrial fibrillation, stroke and blood pressure medications.
In a cohort of 349,299 patients with mean age of 67 years at baseline, 11,035 patients (3.2 per cent) were admitted to hospital with a primary or secondary diagnosis of dementia during a mean follow-up of 4.6 years. Patients with a HbA1c of 10.5 per cent or higher (worst blood sugar control) were 50 per cent more likely to be diagnosed with dementia compared to those with HbA1c of 6.5 per cent or less (most well controlled). Previous stroke in these patients made them 40 per cent more likely to develop dementia than those without stroke.