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Glycaemic measures for 8914 adult FreeStyle Libre users during routine care, segmented by age group and observed changes during the COVID-19 pandemic

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posted on 2022-08-31, 14:25 authored by Pratik Choudhary, Kalvin Kao, Timothy C. Dunn, Laura Brandner, Gerry Rayman, Emma G. Wilmot
Aim: To evaluate the impact of the stay-at-home policy on different glucose metrics for time in range (%TIR 3.9-10 mmol/L), time below range (%TBR < 3.9 mmol/L) and time above range (%TAR > 10 mmol/L) for UK adult FreeStyle Libre (FSL) users within four defined age groups and on observed changes during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Methods: Data were extracted from 8914 LibreView de-identified user accounts for adult users aged 18 years or older with 5 or more days of sensor readings in each month from January to June 2020. Age-group categories were based on self-reported age on LibreView accounts (18-25, 26-49, 50-64 and ≥65 years). Results: In January, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 65 years or older age group had the highest %TIR (57.9%), while the 18-25 years age group had the lowest (51.2%) (P <.001). Within each age group, TIR increased during the analysed months, by 1.7% (26-49 years) to 3.1% (≥65 years) (P <.001 in all cases). %TBR was significantly reduced only in the 26-49 years age group, whereas %TAR was reduced by 1.5% (26-49 years) to 3.0% (≥65 years) (P <.001 in both cases). The proportion of adults achieving both of the more than 70% TIR and less than 4% TBR targets increased from 11.7% to 15.9% for those aged 65 years or older (P <.001) and from 6.0% to 9.1% for those aged 18-25 years (P <.05). Mean daily glucose-sensor scan rates were at least 12 per day and remained stable across the analysis period. Conclusions: Our data show the baseline glucose metrics for FSL users in the UK across different age groups under usual care. During lockdown in the UK, the proportion of adults achieving TIR consensus targets increased among FSL users.

Funding

Sponsorship for this study was funded by Abbott Diabetes Care.

History

Citation

Diabetes Obes Metab.2022;1–7

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism

Publisher

Wiley

issn

1462-8902

eissn

1463-1326

Acceptance date

2022-05-26

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-08-31

Spatial coverage

England

Language

English

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