Moennig Elisabeth, Perez-Nieves Magaly, Hadjiyianni Irene, Cao Dachuang, Ivanova Jasmina, Klask Ralf
Lilly Deutschland GmbH, Bad Homburg, Germany.
Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis, IN, USA.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes. 2018 May;126(5):287-297. doi: 10.1055/s-0043-116386. Epub 2017 Sep 11.
Poor treatment persistence can affect the real-world effectiveness of insulin therapy. A cross-sectional online survey in 942 patients with type 2 diabetes from 7 different countries evaluated patient experience when initiating basal insulin and the reasons behind insulin persistence patterns. Here, we report the quantitative results for the subset of patients from Germany.
Adults with type 2 diabetes who had initiated basal insulin during the last 3-24 months, identified from market-research panels, participated in the survey. Patients were asked if they had ≥7-day gaps in basal insulin treatment, and were then classified as "continuers" (no gap since starting insulin), "interrupters" (≥1 gap within the first 6 months after starting insulin and subsequently restarted insulin), or "discontinuers" (stopped insulin within the first 6 months after starting and had not restarted at the time of the survey). For each country, 50 participants were planned per persistence category. Enrollment ended if the target quota was reached or enrollment plateaued. Data were analyzed overall and separately for each persistence cohort.
The 131 participants from Germany included 55 (42.0%) continuers, 50 (38.2%) interrupters and 26 (19.9%) discontinuers. The most common motivations to initiate basal insulin therapy were encouragement by physician or other healthcare provider (HCP; 54.2%) and expectation to improve glycemic control (42.0%). More than 95% of participants received training before and during insulin initiation (considered as helpful by 81.7%); most (67.2%) preferred in-person training. Continuers more frequently felt that insulin would help to manage diabetes and that their own views were considered when initiating insulin, they reported less concerns and challenges before and during insulin initiation than interrupters or discontinuers. The most common motivations to continue basal insulin were improved glycemic control (72.7%), improved physical well-being (49.1%), and instruction by physician or other HCP (45.5%). The most common reasons contributing to interruption/discontinuation were perceived weight gain (52.0%/50.0%), hypoglycemia (22.0%/38.5%), and potential adverse effects (30.0%/26.9%).
Quality interactions between physicians or other HCPs and their patients before and during the initiation of basal insulin may help to manage patient expectations and to improve persistence to insulin therapy.
治疗依从性差会影响胰岛素治疗在现实世界中的有效性。一项针对来自7个不同国家的942例2型糖尿病患者的横断面在线调查,评估了患者起始基础胰岛素治疗时的体验以及胰岛素持续治疗模式背后的原因。在此,我们报告德国患者亚组的定量结果。
从市场研究小组中识别出在过去3 - 24个月内起始基础胰岛素治疗的2型糖尿病成人患者参与调查。询问患者基础胰岛素治疗是否有≥7天的中断,然后将其分类为“持续使用者”(起始胰岛素后无中断)、“中断使用者”(起始胰岛素后前6个月内有≥1次中断且随后重新开始使用胰岛素)或“停用者”(起始后前6个月内停用胰岛素且在调查时未重新开始使用)。每个国家,计划在每个持续治疗类别中纳入50名参与者。若达到目标配额或招募趋于平稳,则结束招募。对所有数据以及每个持续治疗队列分别进行分析。
来自德国的131名参与者中,有55名(42.0%)持续使用者、50名(38.2%)中断使用者和26名(19.9%)停用者。起始基础胰岛素治疗最常见的动机是医生或其他医疗保健提供者(HCP)的鼓励(54.2%)以及期望改善血糖控制(42.0%)。超过95%的参与者在起始胰岛素治疗之前和期间接受了培训(81.7%认为培训有帮助);大多数(67.2%)更喜欢面对面培训。持续使用者更频繁地感觉到胰岛素有助于控制糖尿病,并且在起始胰岛素治疗时他们自己的意见得到了考虑,他们报告在起始胰岛素治疗之前和期间比中断使用者或停用者有更少的担忧和挑战。继续使用基础胰岛素最常见的动机是血糖控制改善(72.7%)、身体健康改善(49.1%)以及医生或其他HCP的指导(45.5%)。导致中断/停用的最常见原因是体重增加(52.0%/50.0%)、低血糖(22.0%/38.5%)以及潜在的不良反应(30.0%/26.9%)。
在起始基础胰岛素治疗之前和期间,医生或其他HCP与患者之间的高质量互动可能有助于管理患者期望并提高胰岛素治疗的依从性。