51. Proportion of Basal to Total Insulin Dose Is Associated with Metabolic Control, Body Mass Index, and Treatment Modality in Children with Type 1 Diabetes-A Cross-Sectional Study with Data from the International SWEET Registry.
- Author
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Rasmussen VF, Vestergaard ET, Schwandt A, Beltrand J, Rami-Merhar B, O'Riordan SMP, Jarosz-Chobot P, Castro-Correia C, Gevers EF, and Birkebæk NH
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Blood Glucose Self-Monitoring, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 blood, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Female, Humans, Injections, Subcutaneous, Insulin Infusion Systems, Male, Registries, Body Mass Index, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 drug therapy, Glycated Hemoglobin analysis, Hypoglycemic Agents administration & dosage, Insulin administration & dosage
- Abstract
Objectives: To investigate in a large population the proportion of daily basal insulin dose (BD) to daily total insulin dose (TD) (BD/TD) and its association with glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), body mass index (BMI)- SDS, and treatment modality in children with type 1 diabetes., Study Design: Cross-sectional study in subjects with type 1 diabetes, age ≤18 years, and ≥2 years of diabetes duration, registered in the international multicenter Better control in Pediatric and Adolescent diabeteS: Working to crEate CEnTers of Reference registry in March 2018. Variables included region, sex, age, diabetes duration, treatment modality (multiple daily injections [MDI] or continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion [CSII]), self-monitoring blood glucose, HbA1c, BD/TD, and BMI-SDS. BMI was converted to BMI-SDS using World Health Organization charts as reference. Hierarchic linear regression models were applied with adjustment for age, sex, and diabetes duration., Results: A total of 19 687 children with type 1 diabetes (49% female, 49% CSII users) with median age 14.8 (11.5; 17.2) years and diabetes duration 6.0 (3.9; 9.0) years were included. HbA1c was 63 (55; 74) mmol/mol (7.9 [7.2; 8.9]%), and BMI-SDS 0.55 (-0.13; 1.21). Unadjusted, a lower BD/TD was associated with lower HbA1c, male sex, younger age, shorter diabetes duration, lower BMI-SDS, higher numbers of self-monitoring blood glucose and CSII (all P < .01). After adjustment for confounders, lower BD/TD was associated with lower HbA1c (P < .01) and lower BMI-SDS (P < .01) in children on CSII, but not on MDI., Conclusions: Lower BD/TD is positively associated with lower HbA1c and lower BMI-SDS in children with type 1 diabetes on CSII. It remains to be investigated in a prospective study whether reducing BD/TD insulin will improve metabolic control and normalize body weight in children with type 1 diabetes., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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