Agiostratidou Gina, Anhalt Henry, Ball Dana, Blonde Lawrence, Gourgari Evgenia, Harriman Karen N, Kowalski Aaron J, Madden Paul, McAuliffe-Fogarty Alicia H, McElwee-Malloy Molly, Peters Anne, Raman Sripriya, Reifschneider Kent, Rubin Karen, Weinzimer Stuart A
The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, New York, NY.
T1D Exchange, Boston, MA.
Diabetes Care. 2017 Dec;40(12):1622-1630. doi: 10.2337/dc17-1624.
To identify and define clinically meaningful type 1 diabetes outcomes beyond hemoglobin A (HbA) based upon a review of the evidence, consensus from clinical experts, and input from researchers, people with type 1 diabetes, and industry. Priority outcomes include hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, time in range, diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), and patient-reported outcomes (PROs). While priority outcomes for type 1 and type 2 diabetes may overlap, type 1 diabetes was the focus of this work.
A Steering Committee-comprising representatives from the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, the American Association of Diabetes Educators, the American Diabetes Association, the Endocrine Society, JDRF International, The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, the Pediatric Endocrine Society, and the T1D Exchange-was the decision-making body for the Type 1 Diabetes Outcomes Program. Their work was informed by input from researchers, industry, and people with diabetes through Advisory Committees representing each stakeholder group. Stakeholder surveys were used to identify priority outcomes. The outcomes prioritized in the surveys were hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, time in range, DKA, and PROs. To develop consensus on the definitions of these outcomes, the Steering Committee relied on published evidence, their clinical expertise, and feedback from the Advisory Committees.
The Steering Committee developed definitions for hypoglycemia, hyperglycemia, time in range, and DKA in type 1 diabetes. The definitions reflect their assessment of the outcome's short- and long-term clinical impact on people with type 1 diabetes. Knowledge gaps to be addressed by future research were identified. The Steering Committee discussed PROs and concluded that further type 1 diabetes-specific development is needed.
The Steering Committee recommends use of the defined clinically meaningful outcomes beyond HbA in the research, development, and evaluation of type 1 diabetes therapies.
基于证据回顾、临床专家共识以及研究人员、1型糖尿病患者和行业的意见,识别并定义除糖化血红蛋白(HbA)之外具有临床意义的1型糖尿病结局。优先结局包括低血糖、高血糖、血糖达标时间、糖尿病酮症酸中毒(DKA)以及患者报告结局(PROs)。虽然1型和2型糖尿病的优先结局可能存在重叠,但本研究聚焦于1型糖尿病。
一个指导委员会——由美国临床内分泌医师协会、美国糖尿病教育者协会、美国糖尿病协会、内分泌学会、国际青少年糖尿病研究基金会、利昂娜·M. 和哈里·B. 赫尔姆斯利慈善信托基金、儿科内分泌学会以及T1D Exchange的代表组成——是1型糖尿病结局项目的决策机构。他们的工作参考了来自研究人员、行业以及糖尿病患者通过代表各利益相关者群体的咨询委员会提供的意见。通过利益相关者调查来确定优先结局。调查中优先考虑的结局为低血糖、高血糖、血糖达标时间、DKA以及PROs。为就这些结局的定义达成共识,指导委员会依据已发表的证据、他们的临床专业知识以及咨询委员会的反馈意见。
指导委员会制定了1型糖尿病低血糖、高血糖、血糖达标时间和DKA的定义。这些定义反映了他们对这些结局对1型糖尿病患者短期和长期临床影响的评估。确定了未来研究需要解决的知识空白。指导委员会讨论了PROs,并得出结论认为需要进一步针对1型糖尿病进行开发。
指导委员会建议在1型糖尿病治疗的研究、开发和评估中使用除HbA之外已定义的具有临床意义的结局。