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Item
#5
Insulin Pump Therapy Lowers HbA1c
Than More Insulin Glargine
Pump users lowered A1c levels to 7.2%
from 8.1% and the MDI group dropped o 8.1% from
8.4%.
In a study of young type 1 diabetics, continuous
subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) with insulin
aspart was more effective in lowering HbA1c levels
than multiple daily insulin (MDI) injections with
insulin glargine and pre-meal insulin aspart.
Moreover, patients preferred CSII.
Elizabeth Boland, a nurse practitioner on the
Yale Pediatric Diabetes Team, presented her group's
findings during the American Diabetes Association's
63rd Annual Meeting in New Orleans. Most previous
studies of CSII in children were retrospective
and lacked randomized comparisons with MDI, according
to Boland and colleagues.
In an ongoing randomized, prospective study, they
are comparing the use of pump therapy with insulin
aspart versus multiple injections (4 per day)
consisting of insulin glargine (once-daily) and
insulin aspart taken at meals and snacks in 30
patients with type 1 diabetes 8 to 19 years of
age.
"Our preliminary findings [in 26 children]
showed that pump therapy was more effective in
controlling blood sugar, as measured by HbA1c,
than the multiple injection regimen," Boland
said. At 4 months, pump users significantly lowered
their HbA1c levels to 7.2% from 8.1% at baseline.
In contrast, HbA1c in the MDI group showed no
significant change from baseline, dropping only
to 8.1% from 8.4%.
Pump users but not glargine users significantly
reduced their required total daily dose of insulin.
There were 4 episodes of severe hypoglycemia in
the MDI group and 2 in the pump group, but no
diabetic ketoacidosis in either group.
After 4 months, all 12 children in the pump group
chose to continue on CSII therapy and 12 of the
14 children in the MDI group opted to switch to
CSII. American Diabetes Association's 63rd Annual
Meeting
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