Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 Clinical Trial
Official title:
ADJUST: Impact of Professional Continuous Glucose Monitoring in People With Insulin-treated Type 2 Diabetes
In people with type 2 diabetes (T2D) without adequate glycemic control for an extended period
of time, continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) can provide detailed information about daily
glycemic profile facilitating therapeutic adjustments decision which can contribute to an
improvement of glycemic control and overall health status.
The ADJUST study aims to evaluate the impact of CGM systems' use on clinical decision and
glycemic control of people with badly controlled T2D, already under insulin therapy.
Diabetes mellitus (DM) is a growing health problem worldwide. The PrevaDiab study, which
studied the prevalence of diabetes in Portugal in 2010, estimated a prevalence of 11.7 %,
representing about 905 000 patients with diabetes. Taking the demographic evolution of the
Portuguese population, these estimates were updated in 2015, and the global prevalence is
expected to have risen to 13.3 % of the adult population.
The International Diabetes Federation (idf) recommends the following glycaemia levels: <100
mg dL−1 (eq 5.6 mmol L−1) for impaired fasting glucose and <140 mg dL−1 (eq 7.8 mmol L−1) for
2h glycaemia. Several guidelines recommend frequent glucose measurements as an integral part
of the patients' education and self-monitoring.
The percentage of glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) is used as a long-term glycaemic control
proxy, as it gives the mean value of the previous 3 months blood glycose concentrations. idf
recommends a maximum 6.5 % HbA1c concentration for all diabetic patients — 7.0 % for type II
diabetes mellitus (dm-ii) patients — and, the closer to this value, the fewer risk of
complications. The American Diabetes Association (ADA) recommends at least two HbA1c measures
per year in controlled patients and three times per year in patients with therapeutic changes
and/ or failures.
According with Sartore and collaborators, glucose variability indicators describe the glucose
profile of diabetic patients and identify any worsening glycaemic control more accurately
than HbA1c tests. However, the capillary glycaemic measure — the standard monitoring blood
glucose (smbg) — has some issues that can compromise the optimal diabetes management: with
smbg, blood glucose measures are more intermittent, are insufficient to evaluate the
glycaemic profile of the patient, and it does not show what happens between two measurements.
This situation makes it difficult to interpret and extrapolate information necessary to make
adequate decisions in the therapeutic adjustments.
Another clinical important issue is concerned with hypoglycaemia. Hypoglycaemia events limit
the efficacy of intensive insulin therapy, especially in patients with great glucose
variability, and are associated with increased risk of diabetic complications and
cardiovascular disease. The smbg ideal frequency is difficult to establish and consequently,
hypo and hyperglycaemic events may be underestimated, even when the measurements and done
more frequently than recommended. This underestimation of glucose fluctuations may constitute
a critical problem as they have a potential important role in the long term complications
occurrence. Several studies report the efficacy of using a professional continuous glucose
monitoring (pCGM) device on the detection and reduction of hypoglycaemia and on the detection
of hyperglycaemia, alone or compared with SMBG.
Another important parameter is the area under the curve (AUC) in hypoglycaemia, that is,
taking into account not only the duration of the events but also its severity.
This information may be crucial for the provider to make clinical decisions and perform
therapeutic adjustment in order to control glucose levels more efficiently. Additionally,
with a better control of the disease, fewer events are expected to occur showing not only a
better clinical situation but also economic benefits of the pCGM over the SMBG alone.
The iPro2 is a pCGM device (from Medtronic Minimed, Northridge, CA) intended to continuously
record interstitial glucose levels in persons with dm. It is also intended to be worn for
intermittent periods to uncover glycaemic variability and patterns. The data obtained can
then be used to maximize treatment strategies to improve patient outcomes.
The study's primary objective is to compare the difference in mean glycated haemoglobin level
after clinical decision on diabetes treatment based on pCGM.
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