Methods for Insulin Delivery and Glucose Monitoring in Diabetes: Summary of a Comparative Effectiveness Review

Sep 19, 2012Journal of managed care pharmacy : JMCP

Comparing insulin delivery and blood sugar monitoring methods in diabetes

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Abstract

The AHRQ systematic review indicates that both continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) and multiple daily injections (MDI) show similar effectiveness in glycemic control for children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1DM) and adults with type 2 diabetes (T2DM).

  • In adults with T1DM, CSII may reduce hemoglobin A1c more than MDI, but this finding is influenced by one study and has low strength of evidence.
  • CSII is associated with improved quality of life in children and adults with T1DM compared to MDI, although evidence strength is low.
  • Insufficient evidence exists to conclude about the quality of life for adults with T2DM using either insulin delivery modality.
  • Real-time continuous glucose monitoring (rt-CGM) is associated with a greater reduction in A1c compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) in individuals with T1DM, with high strength of evidence.
  • The use of sensor-augmented insulin pumps (rt-CGM + CSII) is superior in lowering A1c compared to MDI/SMBG in nonpregnant individuals with T1DM, supported by moderate strength of evidence.
  • Overall, the strength of evidence is insufficient or low for outcomes related to pregnant women with pre-existing diabetes.

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