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Impact of glycaemic technologies on quality of life and related outcomes in adults with type 1 diabetes: a narrative review

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journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-23, 13:52 authored by Jane Speight, Pratik Choudhary, Emma G Wilmot, Christel Hendrieckx, Hannah Forde, Wai Yee Cheung, Thomas Crabtree, Bekki Millar, Gemma Traviss‐Turner, Andrew Hill, Ramzi A Ajjan

Aims: To explore the association between the use of glycaemic technologies and person-reported outcomes (PROs) in adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D). 


Methods: We included T1D and technology publications reporting on PROs since 2014. Only randomised controlled trials and cohort studies that used validated PRO measures (PROMs) were considered. 


Results: T1D studies reported on a broad range of validated PROMs, mainly as secondary outcome measures. Most studies examined continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), intermittently scanned CGM (isCGM), and the role of continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII), including sensor-augmented CSII and closed loop systems. Generally, studies demonstrated a positive impact of technology on hypoglycaemia-specific and diabetes-specific PROs, including reduced fear of hypoglycaemia and diabetes distress, and greater satisfaction with diabetes treatment. In contrast, generic PROMs (including measures of health/functional status, emotional well-being, depressive symptoms, and sleep quality) were less likely to demonstrate improvements associated with the use of glycaemic technologies. Several studies showed contradictory findings, which may relate to study design, population and length of follow-up. Differences in PRO findings were apparent between randomised controlled trials and cohort studies, which may be due to different populations studied and/or disparity between trial and real-world conditions. 


Conclusions: PROs are usually assessed as secondary outcomes in glycaemic technology studies. Hypoglycaemia-specific and diabetes-specific, but not generic, PROs show the benefits of glycaemic technologies, and deserve a more central role in future studies as well as routine clinical care.

Funding

Abbott Diabetes Care; Avacta Life Sciences; BBSRC; NIHR; Diabetes UK; Diabetes Victoria and Deakin University

History

Citation

Speight, J, Choudhary, P, Wilmot, EG, et al. Impact of glycaemic technologies on quality of life and related outcomes in adults with type 1 diabetes: A narrative review. Diabet Med. 2023; 40:e14944. doi: 10.1111/dme.14944

Author affiliation

Diabetes Research Centre

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Diabetic Medicine

Volume

40

Pagination

e14944

Publisher

Wiley

issn

0742-3071

eissn

1464-5491

Acceptance date

2022-08-18

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2023-06-23

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en