Abstract

To investigate the incidence of all-cause mortality, composite mortality and morbidity in people with Type 1 diabetes formerly randomized in the Stockholm Diabetes Intervention Study. A total of 102 people with Type 1 diabetes were randomized in the period 1982-1984 to intensified conventional treatment or standard treatment with insulin for a mean of 7.5 years. We prospectively re-evaluated this cohort for the period until 2011 with regard to all-cause mortality and composite mortality, which consisted of myocardial infarction, stroke and end-stage renal disease as primary endpoints. Secondary endpoints were first-time hospitalization for myocardial infarction and stroke or end-stage renal disease. Data on HbA1c levels (mean of 22 values/person) were retrospectively collected between 1996 and 2011. During the median follow-up of 28 years, 22 people died: seven in the intensified conventional insulin group compared with 15 in the standard treatment group (P = 0.30). With regard to composite mortality, six people in the intensified conventional insulin group died compared with 11 in the standard treatment group (P = 0.56). For the secondary endpoints, 11 people in the intensified conventional insulin group developed myocardial infarction or stroke compared with 17 in the standard treatment group (P = 0.72), and one person in the intensified conventional insulin compared with seven people in the standard treatment group developed end-stage renal disease (P = 0.09). Mean HbA1c levels did not differ between groups during the follow-up years. All-cause mortality, cardiovascular morbidity and progression to end-stage renal disease did not differ in people with Type 1 diabetes earlier randomized to intensified insulin treatment.

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