DPC becomes ‘force’ for innovation and best practice

Women sitting at the Diabetes Professional Care

Diabetes Professional Care 2018 (DPC2018) is set to become the biggest yetwith a record-breaking attendance expected, leading to the event being described as a “force for good”. More than 6,500 delegates have pre-registered, with 4,000 predicted to attend – topping last year’s previous record of3,235 delegates and placing it firmly as the UK’s best-attended event for healthcare professionals working in diabetes. DPC2018 is the UK’s only national, free-to-attend and CPD-accredited conference for those involved in the prevention, treatment and management of diabetes, and its related conditions. Taking place at London’s Olympia on 14 and 15 November, delegates are invited to attend presentations and workshops on a variety of topics, such as the type 2 diabetes reversal,mental health and wellbeing, cardiovascular disease as well as making the most of consultations. In response to rising childhood obesity rates, DPC2018 is staging a Live Debate dedicated to the subject with top experts and policy makers from the field. The debate called ‘Preventing childhood obesity – whose responsibility?Policymakers, professionals, family environments or technology?’will take place from 2.30pm to 3.30pm on Thursday, November 15. This year, the results of the eagerly-anticipated DECLARE study into cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes will be shared for the first time in the UK at the conference. The research involved 17,000 people and showed how the drug Forxiga (dapagliflozin)reduced hospitalisation for heart failure or CV death with no increase in major CV events versus placebo in a broad population with type 2 diabetes. The session called Cardiovascular outcomes with SGLT2 inhibitors in type 2 diabetes – update from AHA conference takes place on Wednesday, November 14, between 3.15pm and 3.45pm. A new user-friendly, subject classification has been introduced to the programme and workshops as the organisers, Healthcare Publishing & Events, strive to improve the event, which encompasses both primary and secondary care, helping to provide a platform to further integrated care and best practice. Founder Maggie Meer, who has type 2 diabetes and set up the conference in a bid to improve care, said:  “It’s massively exciting that Diabetes Professional Care has developed so much since we started and now people are using our annual event as a platform to launch research findings, products, data and examples of best practice in diabetes. Diabetes Professional Care is at the heart of sharing best practice and tackling subjects that need to be addressed in diabetes.” Commenting on the rise of Diabetes Professional Care, Oliver Jelley, Editor of The Diabetes Times, said: “Diabetes Professional Care has quickly become a force for good in diabetes care in the UK, with the conference acting like a platform to share best practice and innovation across the NHS to improve care for people with diabetes.” For more information about the Diabetes Professional Care show please click here

Results of major CVD study presented at DPC2018

Women at the DECLARE study

The results of the eagerly-anticipated DECLARE study into cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes was shared for the first time in the UK at Diabetes Professional Care (DPC2018). The research involved 17,000 people and showed how the drug Forxiga (dapagliflozin) reduced hospitalisation for heart failure or cardiovascular (CV) death with no increase in major CV events versus placebo in a broad population with type 2 diabetes. The session called Cardiovascular outcomes with SGLT2 inhibitors in type 2 diabetes – update from AHA conference took place on Wednesday, November 14, between 3.15pm and 3.45pm. DECLARE-TIMI 58 is the first CV outcomes trial (CVOT) in its class to include a majority of people without established CV disease. It is the first CVOT to include hospitalisation for heart failure as part of a primary outcome; heart failure in people with type 2 diabetes accounts for 1.25 million bed days per year in England and Wales Published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), results from DECLARE-TIMI 58 show dapagliflozin significantly reduced the risk of hospitalisation for heart failure (hHF) or CV death vs. placebo by 17% (4.9% vs. 5.8%; HR 0.83 [95% CI 0.73-0.95], p=0.005) in one of two primary efficacy endpoints1. The reduction in hHF or CV death was consistent across the entire patient population studied in DECLARE- TIMI 58, which included those with multiple CV risk factors and those with established CV disease. DECLARE-TIMI 58 also confirmed the well-established safety profile for dapagliflozin by meeting the primary safety endpoint of non-inferiority vs. placebo, demonstrating no increase in the composite of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), defined as CV death, heart attack (myocardial infarction), or stroke (upper boundary of the 95% CI, <1.3; p<0.001 for non-inferiority). While there were fewer MACE events observed with dapagliflozin, this did not reach statistical significance for superiority versus placebo as the second primary efficacy endpoint (8.8% for dapagliflozin vs. 9.4% for placebo; HR 0.93 [95% CI 0.84-1.03]; p=0.17).1 Professor John Wilding, who leads diabetes and endocrinology research at the University of Liverpool, and is Lead UK Investigator and member of the Executive Steering Committee for DECLARE, said: “Heart failure is often overlooked as a complication of type 2 diabetes; however, these patients are 33% more likely to develop heart failure compared to the general population. The results of DECLARE show that dapagliflozin reduced the risk of hospitalisation for heart failure and CV death and, crucially, that this effect is seen not only in patients with established CVdisease, but also those who have not yet had an event but are at high risk.” Type 2 diabetes has been associated with an increased risk of heart attack and stroke, but heart failure develops earlier than either of these complications and carries with it a high rate of death and a large cost burden. In 2015/16, 32% of all hospital admissions for heart failure in England and Wales were for people with diabetes, accounting for over 1.25 million bed days. By 2035, it is estimated that caring for T2D patients with heart failure will cost the UK almost half a billion pounds each year. Dapagliflozin is not indicated for prevention of CV events. In Europe, dapagliflozin is indicated for adults aged 18 years and older with type 2 diabetes mellitus to improve glycaemic control: As a monotherapy when diet and exercise alone do not provide adequate glycaemic control in patients for whom use of metformin is considered inappropriate due to intolerance. In combination with other glucose-lowering medical products including insulin, when these, together with diet and exercise, do not provide adequate glycaemic control. DECLARE-TIMI 58 is the largest CVOT in the SGLT2 inhibitor class of medicines and the first to include the composite of hHF and CV death as a primary endpoint. The study included a broad population of more than 17,000 patients with the aim of reflecting a large spectrum of T2D patients in clinical practice. The results of DECLARE showed no imbalance with dapagliflozin vs. placebo in amputations (1.4% vs. 1.3%), fractures (5.3% vs. 5.1%), bladder cancer (0.3% vs. 0.5%)or Fournier’s gangrene (1 case vs. 5 cases).1 The respective incidences of diabetic ketoacidosis (0.3% vs. 0.1%) and genital infections (0.9% vs. 0.1%) were rare. Although secondary endpoints were nominally significant, the DECLARE results also show that dapagliflozin reduced the rate of new or worsening kidney disease by 24% vs. placebo across the broad patient population studied (4.3% vs. 5.6%; HR 0.76 [95% CI 0.67-0.87]),1which is important because T2D is one of the biggest risk factors for developing chronic kidney disease.7 In addition, there were fewer all-cause mortality events with dapagliflozin vs. placebo (6.2% vs. 6.6%; HR 0.93 [95% CI 0.82-1.04]). For more information about the DECLARE study please visit www.diabetesprofessionalcare.com  

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