Department of Endocrinology and Nephrology, Nordsjaellands Hospital Hillerød, Hillerød, Denmark.
Al Hada Military Hospital, Taif, Saudi Arabia.
Diabetes Obes Metab. 2019 Apr;21(4):844-853. doi: 10.1111/dom.13588. Epub 2018 Dec 17.
Optimal diabetes care requires clear understanding of the incidence of hypoglycaemia in real-world clinical practice. Current data on hypoglycaemia are generally limited to those reported from randomised controlled clinical trials. The Hypoglycaemia Assessment Tool (HAT) study, a non-interventional real-world study of hypoglycaemia, assessed hypoglycaemia in 27 585 individuals across 24 countries. The present study compared the incidence of hypoglycaemia from the HAT study with other similarly designed, large, real-world studies.
A literature search of PubMed (1995-2017) for population-based studies of insulin-treated patients with type 1 or type 2 diabetes (T1D, T2D), excluding clinical trials and reviews, identified comparable population-based studies reporting the incidence of hypoglycaemia.
The 24 comparative studies, including more than 24 000 participants with T1D and more than 160 000 participants with T2D, varied in design, size, inclusion criteria, definitions of hypoglycaemia and method of recording hypoglycaemia. Reported rates (events per patient-year [PPY]) of hypoglycaemia were higher in patients with T1D than in those with T2D (overall T1D, 21.8-73.3 and T2D, 1.3-37.7; mild/non-severe T1D, 29.0-126.7 and T2D, 1.3-41.5; severe T1D, 0.7-5.8 and T2D, 0.0-2.5; nocturnal T1D, 2.6-11.3 and T2D, 0.38-9.7) and were similar to the ranges found in the HAT study.
The HAT data on hypoglycaemia incidence were comparable with those from other real-world studies and indicate a high incidence of hypoglycaemia among insulin-treated patients. Differences in rates among studies are mostly explained by differences in patient populations and study methodology. The goal of reducing hypoglycaemia should be a target for continued educational and evidence-based pharmacological interventions.
优化糖尿病治疗需要清楚地了解实际临床实践中低血糖的发生率。目前关于低血糖的数据通常仅限于随机对照临床试验报告的数据。低血糖评估工具(HAT)研究是一项非干预性的真实世界低血糖研究,评估了 24 个国家的 27585 名个体的低血糖情况。本研究将 HAT 研究中的低血糖发生率与其他类似设计的大型真实世界研究进行了比较。
通过对 PubMed(1995-2017 年)进行文献检索,以确定接受胰岛素治疗的 1 型或 2 型糖尿病(T1D、T2D)患者的基于人群的研究,排除临床试验和综述,确定了报告低血糖发生率的可比基于人群的研究。
这 24 项比较研究包括超过 24000 名 T1D 患者和超过 160000 名 T2D 患者,研究设计、规模、纳入标准、低血糖定义和低血糖记录方法各不相同。T1D 患者的低血糖报告率(每患者年事件数 [PPY])高于 T2D 患者(总体 T1D,21.8-73.3 和 T2D,1.3-37.7;轻度/非严重 T1D,29.0-126.7 和 T2D,1.3-41.5;严重 T1D,0.7-5.8 和 T2D,0.0-2.5;夜间 T1D,2.6-11.3 和 T2D,0.38-9.7),与 HAT 研究中的范围相似。
HAT 关于低血糖发生率的数据与其他真实世界研究的数据相当,表明接受胰岛素治疗的患者低血糖发生率很高。研究之间的发生率差异主要归因于患者人群和研究方法的差异。降低低血糖的目标应该是继续进行教育和基于证据的药物干预的目标。