4.5 Article

DYSGLYCEMIA-BASED CHRONIC DISEASE: AN AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGISTS POSITION STATEMENT

Journal

ENDOCRINE PRACTICE
Volume 24, Issue 11, Pages 995-1011

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.4158/PS-2018-0139

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Aegerion
  2. Amarin
  3. Amgen
  4. AstraZeneca
  5. Bristol-Myers-Squibb
  6. Boehringer Ingelheim
  7. BI-Lilly
  8. Gan Lee
  9. Gilead
  10. Grifols
  11. Hamni
  12. Intarcia
  13. Janssen
  14. Lexicon
  15. Lilly
  16. Merck
  17. Mylan
  18. Merck-Pfizer
  19. Novo Nordisk
  20. Regeneron
  21. Sanofi
  22. Astra Zeneca
  23. Weight Watchers
  24. Eisai
  25. Pfizer
  26. Elcelyx

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The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) has created a dysglycemia-based chronic disease (DBCD) multimorbidity care model consisting of four distinct stages along the insulin resistance-prediabetes-type 2 diabetes (T2D) spectrum that are actionable in a preventive care paradigm to reduce the potential impact of T2D, cardiometabolic risk, and cardiovascular events. The controversy of whether there is value, cost-effectiveness, or clinical benefit of diagnosing and/or managing the prediabetes state is resolved by regarding the problem, not in isolation, but as an intermediate stage in the continuum of a progressive chronic disease with opportunities for multiple concurrent prevention strategies. In this context, stage 1 represents insulin resistance, stage 2 prediabetes, stage 3 type 2 diabetes, and stage 4 vascular complications. This model encourages earliest intervention focusing on structured lifestyle change. Further scientific research may eventually reclassify stage 2 DBCD prediabetes from a predisease to a true disease state. This position statement is consistent with a portfolio of AACE endocrine disease care models, including adiposity-based chronic disease, that prioritize patient-centered care, evidence-based medicine, complexity, multimorbid chronic disease, the current health care environment, and a societal mandate for a higher value attributed to good health. Ultimately, transformative changes in diagnostic coding and reimbursement structures for prediabetes and T2D can provide improvements in population-based endocrine health care.

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