Behavioral Diabetes Institute, 5230 Carrol Canyon Road Ste 208, San Diego, CA 92121, United States; University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr, La Jolla, CA 92093, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford Diabetes Research Center, Stanford University School of Medicine, 279 Campus Drive, B300, Stanford, CA 94305, United States.
Diabetes Res Clin Pract. 2022 Aug;190:109998. doi: 10.1016/j.diabres.2022.109998. Epub 2022 Jul 16.
To evaluate psychosocial outcomes for adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) using the tubeless Omnipod® 5 Automated Insulin Delivery (AID) System.
A single-arm, multicenter (across the United States), prospective safety and efficacy study of the tubeless AID system included 115 adults with T1D. Participants aged 18-70 years completed questionnaires assessing psychosocial outcomes - diabetes distress (T1-DDS), hypoglycemic confidence (HCS), well-being (WHO-5), sleep quality (PSQI), insulin delivery satisfaction (IDSS), diabetes treatment satisfaction (DTSQ), and system usability (SUS) - before and after 3 months of AID use. Associations among participant characteristics, psychosocial measures and glycemic outcomes were evaluated using linear regression analyses.
Adults using the tubeless AID system demonstrated improvements in diabetes-specific psychosocial measures, including diabetes distress, hypoglycemic confidence, insulin delivery satisfaction, diabetes treatment satisfaction, and system usability after 3 months (all P < 0.001). No changes in general well-being or sleep quality were observed. The psychosocial outcomes assessed were not consistently associated with baseline participant characteristics (i.e., age, sex, diabetes duration, glycemic outcomes including percent time in range 70-180 mg/dL, percent time below range < 70 mg/dL, hemoglobin A1c, or insulin regimen).
Use of the Omnipod 5 AID system was associated with significant improvements in diabetes-related psychosocial outcomes for adults with T1D.
NCT04196140.
使用无管 Omnipod® 5 自动化胰岛素输送(AID)系统评估 1 型糖尿病(T1D)成人的心理社会结局。
一项在美国多个中心进行的、无管 AID 系统的单臂、前瞻性安全性和疗效研究纳入了 115 名 T1D 成人患者。年龄在 18-70 岁之间的参与者在使用 AID 3 个月前后完成了评估心理社会结局的问卷,包括糖尿病困扰量表(T1-DDS)、低血糖信心量表(HCS)、幸福感量表(WHO-5)、睡眠质量量表(PSQI)、胰岛素输送满意度量表(IDSS)、糖尿病治疗满意度量表(DTSQ)和系统可用性量表(SUS)。使用线性回归分析评估参与者特征、心理社会测量和血糖结局之间的关联。
使用无管 AID 系统的成年人在 3 个月后,糖尿病特异性心理社会测量指标(包括糖尿病困扰、低血糖信心、胰岛素输送满意度、糖尿病治疗满意度和系统可用性)均有所改善(均 P < 0.001)。一般幸福感或睡眠质量没有变化。评估的心理社会结局与基线参与者特征(即年龄、性别、糖尿病病程、血糖结局,包括 70-180mg/dL 范围内的时间百分比、<70mg/dL 范围内的时间百分比、糖化血红蛋白或胰岛素方案)不一致。
使用 Omnipod 5 AID 系统与 T1D 成人糖尿病相关心理社会结局的显著改善相关。
NCT04196140。