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How introduction of automated insulin delivery systems may influence psychosocial outcomes in adults with type 1 diabetes: Findings from the first investigation with the OmnipodĀ® 5 System

Authors :
William H. Polonsky
Korey K. Hood
Carol J. Levy
Sarah A. MacLeish
Irl B. Hirsch
Sue A. Brown
Bruce W. Bode
Anders L. Carlson
Viral N. Shah
Ruth S. Weinstock
Anuj Bhargava
Thomas C. Jones
Grazia Aleppo
Sanjeev N. Mehta
Lori M. Laffel
Gregory P. Forlenza
Jennifer L. Sherr
Lauren M. Huyett
Todd E. Vienneau
Trang T. Ly
Source :
Diabetes research and clinical practice. 190
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

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.

Details

ISSN :
18728227
Volume :
190
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes research and clinical practice
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....03773579c88f29491c65ddd7087cb736