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Continuous Glucose Monitoring and Hypoglycemia Unawareness in Type 1 Diabetes

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StatusCompleted
Sponsors
CHU de Reims

Keywords

Abstract

Looking for strict normoglycemia in type 1 diabetes increases the risk of hypoglycemia, exposing to hypoglycemia unawareness. It has been shown that the early correction of hypoglycemia can help recovering the perception of hypoglycemia. The purpose of this prospective study was to assess the value of sensor-augmented insulin-pump therapy to treat hypoglycemia unawareness.

Description

To confirm hypoglycemia unawareness, patients answered a questionnaire based on the items explored by the model of Clarke 19 about hypoglycemia and hypoglycemia awareness. The eligibility of patients was confirmed by a blinded CG M recording using the trademark iPro ™ 2 sensor for 6 days. During this period the patient reported on a logbook the perception of their hypoglycemia, symptoms and how any hypoglycemia was corrected. Hypoglycemic manifestations were divided into adrenergic (shakiness, anxiety, palpitations, sweating, hunger, nausea, headache, coldness and pallor) and neuroglycopenic effects (impaired judgment, moodiness, paresthesia, emotional lability, confusion, ataxia, double vision, amnesia, seizures and lethargy). The confrontation of hypoglycemia detected by the blinded CG M and self-reported hypoglycemia validated the diagnosis of hypoglycemia unawareness.

Patients used the Paradigm® Veo™ pump and glucose sensors (trademark : Enlite®) with an hypoglycemia alarm set at sensor glucose value of 70 mg/dL while the LG S option was set to suspend insulin delivery at a sensor glucose value of 50 mg/dL or less. These thresholds allowed an active correction of hypoglycemia by the patient between 50 and 70 mg/dL. Patients were educated to use the system and to treat and manage hypoglycemia. Pump data were uploaded using the trademark Medtronic CareLink™ Management Software for Diabetes during visits at 10 days (D10), 2 months (M2) and 3 months (M3). Hypoglycemia awareness was assessed by an initial quiz that was repeated at M3 and 6 months (M6). A blinded CGM iPro ™ 2 was also realized at M3 to validate the modifications after sensor-augmented insulin-pump therapy.

Dates

Last Verified: 06/30/2018
First Submitted: 07/18/2018
Estimated Enrollment Submitted: 07/26/2018
First Posted: 07/29/2018
Last Update Submitted: 07/26/2018
Last Update Posted: 07/29/2018
Actual Study Start Date: 06/30/2012
Estimated Primary Completion Date: 01/31/2013
Estimated Study Completion Date: 05/31/2013

Condition or disease

Type 1 Diabetes

Phase

-

Arm Groups

ArmIntervention/treatment
diabetes group
Patient with hypoglycemia unawareness

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study 18 Years To 18 Years
Sexes Eligible for StudyAll
Sampling methodNon-Probability Sample
Accepts Healthy VolunteersYes
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

- >18 years

- type 1 diabetes

- had been treated with insulin pump for more than three months

- had hypoglycemia unawareness with a hypoglycemia perception threshold below 60 mg/dL and/or had had at least one severe hypoglycemia event in the previous year

Exclusion Criteria:

- > 18 years

- any serious disease that could interfere with the study

- pregnancy,

- incompatibility with monitoring,

- irregular management of diabetes,

- hearing loss and low vision,

- preventing them from using the devices

Outcome

Primary Outcome Measures

1. Glycemia measured by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and pump [Day 0]

2. Glycemia measured by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and pump [day 10]

3. Glycemia measured by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and pump [Month 2]

4. Glycemia measured by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and pump [Month 3]

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