Less
More
-
Posts: 102
-
Thank you received: 0
-
-
08 Aug 2014 11:55 #205927
by raisa
Patients treated with a drug widely prescribed for type 2 diabetes can live longer than people without the condition, a large-scale study involving over 180,000 people has shown.
The findings indicate that a drug known as metformin, used to control glucose levels in the body and already known to exhibit anticancer properties, could offer prognostic and prophylactic benefits to people without diabetes.
Published in a leading diabetes journal, Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism by scientists from Cardiff University, the study set out to compare the survival of diabetes patients prescribed with metformin with patients prescribed with another common diabetes drug called sulphonylurea.
Importantly, the life expectancy of these cohorts was also compared against non-diabetics who were matched based on criteria that included age, gender, same general practice, smoking status and clinical status.
"What we found was illuminating," said lead author Professor Craig Currie from Cardiff University's School of Medicine.
"Patients treated with metformin had a small but statistically significant improvement in survival compared with the cohort of non-diabetics, whereas those treated with sulphonylureas had a consistently reduced survival compared with non-diabetic patients. This was true even without any clever statistical manipulation.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Less
More
-
Posts: 93768
-
Thank you received: 44
-
-
08 Aug 2014 13:52 #205969
by ketchim
I would have to confirm with our resident BioChemist and Pharmaceutical expert:
Nargis !!
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
-
priya
-
-
Visitor
-
Less
More
-
Posts: 93768
-
Thank you received: 44
-
-
-
priya
-
-
Visitor
-
Less
More
-
Posts: 93768
-
Thank you received: 44
-
-
-
VillageBelle
-
-
Visitor
-
08 Aug 2014 14:17 #205994
by VillageBelle
my hubby has type 2 diabetes.....for almost 20 yrs.
used metformin for the first 5 yrs....then doctor changed him to insulin.....because, yes, metformin causes serious kindney damage.
with insulin.....no kidney damage to date and he is doing great considering how long he has had this disease.
but....from day 1 he has taken very good care of himself.....eat healthy, maintain his weight, exercise and visit doctors regularly, including a dietician and eye specialist cause glucoma is another serious side-effect for diabetics.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
-
Forum
-
Political Opinions, Commentaries on Current Issues
-
The Water Cooler!
-
Type 2 diabetics can live longer than people without the disease
Time to create page: 0.181 seconds