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Hypoglycemia Subtypes in Type 1 Diabetes: An Exploration of the Hypoglycemia Fear Survey-II

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-15, 15:00 authored by Rory H Maclean, Peter Jacob, Pratik Choudhary, Simon R Heller, Elena Toschi, Dulmini Kariyawasam, Augustin Brooks, Mike Kendall, Nicole de Zoysa, Linda A Gonder-Frederick, Stephanie A Amiel
OBJECTIVE
The Hypoglycemia Fear Survey-II (HFS-II) is a well-validated measure of fear of hypoglycemia in people with type 1 diabetes. The aim of this study was to explore the relationships between hypoglycemia worries, behaviors, and cognitive barriers to hypoglycemia avoidance and hypoglycemia awareness status, severe hypoglycemia, and HbA1c.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
Participants with type 1 diabetes (n = 178), with the study population enriched for people at risk for severe hypoglycemia (49%), completed questionnaires for assessing hypoglycemia fear (HFS-II), hyperglycemia avoidance (Hyperglycemia Avoidance Scale [HAS]), diabetes distress (Problem Areas In Diabetes [PAID]), and cognitive barriers to hypoglycemia avoidance (Attitudes to Awareness of Hypoglycemia [A2A]). Exploratory factor analysis was applied to the HFS-II. We sought to establish clusters based on HFS-II, A2A, Gold, HAS, and PAID using k-means clustering.

RESULTS
Four HFS-II factors were identified: Sought Safety, Restricted Activity, Ran High, and Worry. While Sought Safety, Restricted Activity, and Worry increased with progressively impaired awareness and recurrent severe hypoglycemia, Ran High did not. With cluster analysis we outlined four clusters: two clusters with preserved hypoglycemia awareness were differentiated by low fear/low cognitive barriers to hypoglycemia avoidance (cluster 1) versus high fear and distress and increased Ran High behaviors (cluster 2). Two clusters with impaired hypoglycemia awareness were differentiated by low fear/high cognitive barriers (cluster 3) as well as high fear/low cognitive barriers (cluster 4).

CONCLUSIONS
This is the first study to define clusters of hypoglycemia experience by worry, behaviors, and cognitive barriers to hypoglycemia avoidance. The resulting subtypes may be important in understanding and treating problematic hypoglycemia.

Funding

JDRF Project Grant no. 4-SRA-2017-266-M-N

National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) through the Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) South London at King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

The study is sponsored jointly by King’s College London and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

History

Citation

Diabetes Care 2022;45(3):538–546

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre, College of Life Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Diabetes Care

Volume

45

Issue

3

Pagination

538–546

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

issn

0149-5992

eissn

1935-5548

Acceptance date

2021-12-09

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-03-15

Language

en

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