Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast

Cardionerds: A Cardiology Podcast


92. Diabetes Mellitus for CardioNerds with Dr. Dennis Bruemmer

December 15, 2020

CardioNerds (Amit Goyal and Daniel Ambinder) discuss diabetes mellitus with Dr. Dennis Bruemmer. This is a must-listen for anyone engaged in the case of the cardiovascular patient. Given the alarming obesity epidemic, we anticipate a rising worldwide tide of diabetes mellitus and ensuing cardiovascular disease. Here we discuss the epidemiology and approach to diabetes management, with emphasis on what CardioNerds need to know. Dr. Bruemmer is board-certified in both cardiology and endocrinology, and is the director of the Center for Cardiometabolic Health in the section of Preventive Cardiology and Rehabilitation at the Cleveland Clinic.

Episode graphic by Dr. Carine Hamo

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Show notes

* Why should CardioNerds pay attention to diabetes mellitus (DM)? * As a cardiovascular risk equivalent, DM is a key CVD risk factor, associated with a 2-4 fold increased risk. 70% of ACS patients have DM. * Cardiologists will see more patient with DM given the rising prevalence of obesity, subsequent diabetes and ensuing CVD.  * Only 6% of patients with DM and cardiovascular disease (CVD) get appropriate care for DM and CVD. * Historically, hypoglycemic agents improved microvascular outcomes (retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy), but not macrovascular outcomes (MI, CVA, PAD). However, this has changed with the advent of mandatory cardiovascular safety trials with positive data for GLP1 agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors! * There aren't enough endocrinologists! They only see ~5% of DM patients. In 2012 the US generated 280 endocrinologists versus  100 million patient with DM or pre-DM. Primary care physicians are key allies in the care of these patients.  * So as CardioNerds, let's get over this therapeutic inertia and take ownership of our patients' DM as we already do for their HTN and HLD; in collaboration with a multidisciplinary team including the PCP, dietician, pharmacist, DM educators, +/- behavioral therapist, +/- endocrinologist, +/- metabolic surgeon. 

* What is your global approach to the patient with DM? * Optimize the non-DM CVD risk factors with lifestyle intervention and medical management: CVD risk factors are very common in patients with DM (sedentary lifestyle, unhealthy weight, HTN, HLD).  The Steno-2 Study (Gaede et al., NEJM 2008) showed that in patients with T2DM & microalbuminuria, intensive intervention with multiple drug combinations and behavioral modification was better with regards to: vascular complications, death from any cause, and death from CV causes.     * Emphasize a healthy lifestyle -  use a p...