Here’s a current, practical (ADA-style) overview of diabetes screening and treatment, focused on what you actually use in primary care / correctional medicine.
1. Diabetes Screening Guidelines (ADA 2025-style)
Who to screen?
Screen ALL adults starting at age 35
- even if asymptomatic
Screen earlier if overweight/obese (BMI ≥25, or ≥23 in Asian patients) PLUS risk factors, such as:
- first-degree relative with diabetes
- high-risk ethnicity
- history of gestational diabetes
- PCOS
- hypertension
- dyslipidemia
- CVD
- sedentary lifestyle
- prediabetes history
Screening tests (any ONE of these is diagnostic if abnormal):
1. HbA1c
- Normal: <5.7%
- Prediabetes: 5.7–6.4%
- Diabetes: ≥6.5%
2. Fasting plasma glucose
- Normal: <100 mg/dL
- Prediabetes: 100–125
- Diabetes: ≥126
3. 2-hour OGTT (75 g)
- Normal: <140
- Prediabetes: 140–199
- Diabetes: ≥200
4. Random glucose (with symptoms)
- ≥200 + classic symptoms = diagnostic
Symptoms:
- polyuria
- polydipsia
- weight loss
2. When to Start Treatment (Type 2 Diabetes)
Treatment depends on:
- HbA1c
- symptoms
- comorbidities
First key concept:
You do NOT automatically start insulin at diagnosis.
Most patients start with:
- lifestyle + metformin
3. First-Line Medication: METFORMIN
Why metformin is first line:
- lowers glucose without causing hypoglycemia
- weight neutral or mild loss
- long safety record
- inexpensive
- possible cardiovascular benefit
When to start metformin:
Generally:
- HbA1c ≥6.5% (diagnostic)
OR - fasting glucose ≥126
Typical starting dose:
- 500 mg daily or BID
- titrate up to 1000 mg BID as tolerated
Contraindications / caution:
- severe renal impairment (eGFR <30 → avoid)
- severe liver disease
- risk of lactic acidosis (rare but important)
Common side effects:
- GI upset (very common)
- diarrhea
- metallic taste
Correctional medicine note:
Metformin is often interrupted on intake → restarting it appropriately is a high-yield intervention.
4. Second-Line Therapy (when metformin not enough)
If HbA1c remains above goal after ~3 months:
Choice depends on comorbidities.
Preferred add-on classes (modern guidelines)
1. GLP-1 receptor agonists (very important class)
Examples:
- semaglutide
- liraglutide
- dulaglutide
Benefits:
- weight loss
- strong A1c reduction
- cardiovascular benefit
- low hypoglycemia risk
2. SGLT2 inhibitors
Examples:
- empagliflozin
- dapagliflozin
Benefits:
- heart failure benefit
- kidney protection
- modest weight loss
- glucose lowering
Choosing between them:
If obesity or weight loss desired → GLP-1 first
If heart failure or CKD → SGLT2 preferred
Other second-line options:
- sulfonylureas (cheaper, but hypoglycemia risk)
- DPP-4 inhibitors (modest effect, well tolerated)
- TZDs (pioglitazone; edema/weight gain risk)
5. When to Start Insulin (Key Question)
This is the most clinically important threshold question.
Start insulin when:
1. Severe hyperglycemia:
- HbA1c ≥10% OR
- blood glucose ≥300 mg/dL
2. Symptoms of hyperglycemia:
- polyuria
- polydipsia
- weight loss
- fatigue
- dehydration
3. Catabolic state:
- ketosis
- significant weight loss
4. Failure of oral therapy:
- persistent A1c above goal despite multiple agents
Important nuance:
- Type 2 diabetes does NOT automatically require insulin at diagnosis
- But very high A1c (≥10%) often warrants early insulin
6. Insulin Basics (practical approach)
Initial regimen (Type 2 DM):
Basal insulin:
- glargine OR detemir OR degludec
Start:
- ~10 units nightly OR
- 0.1–0.2 units/kg/day
Titration:
- increase based on fasting glucose
Goal fasting:
- ~80–130 mg/dL
When to add mealtime insulin:
- if A1c still uncontrolled after basal optimization
7. HbA1c Treatment Targets
General target:
- <7%
Less strict targets:
- elderly
- high hypoglycemia risk
- multiple comorbidities
Target:
- 7.5–8% or higher depending on situation
More strict targets:
- younger patients
- few comorbidities
- long life expectancy
Target:
- <6.5% (selected cases)
8. Diabetes in Correctional Medicine (Important Practical Issues)
You will frequently see:
1. Medication interruption on intake
- metformin stopped
- insulin regimen unknown
- poor prior adherence
2. Undiagnosed diabetes
- discovered via screening labs
3. Poor baseline control
- A1c often very high (9–12%+)
4. Diet variability
- institutional diet affects glucose control
5. Hypoglycemia risk
Especially with:
- insulin
- sulfonylureas
9. Summary Algorithm (Practical)
Step 1: Diagnose
- A1c ≥6.5%
Step 2: Start metformin (if no contraindication)
Step 3: Reassess in ~3 months
- If above goal → add GLP-1 or SGLT2 (or other agent)
Step 4: Consider insulin if:
- A1c ≥10%
OR - glucose ≥300
OR - symptomatic hyperglycemia
Bottom Line
- Screen adults starting at age 35 (earlier if high risk)
- Diagnose with A1c ≥6.5%
- First-line: metformin
- Add GLP-1 or SGLT2 next based on comorbidities
- Start insulin when:
- A1c ≥10% OR glucose ≥300 OR symptomatic/catabolic state
If you want, I can next turn this into a correctional intake diabetes protocol (what to restart immediately on day 1 vs what to hold vs what labs to order) or a quick “insulin initiation cheat sheet.”
