Daily Glycaemic Variability in Frail or Disabled Older Patients With Diabetes Over 75 Treated With Basal Insulin
- Registration Number
- NCT02486341
- Lead Sponsor
- University Hospital, Bordeaux
- Brief Summary
Basal insulin is widely used in older patients with diabetes. Human insulin Neutral Protamine Hagedorn (NPH) has been proposed as basal insulin in older (75 years or older) frail and dependent patients due to its shorter action. However, no study has analysed the glycaemic profile in elderly subjects according to the basal insulin used, particularly in frail or disabled patients.
The aim of this study is to measure intra-day glycaemic variability according basal insulin (human NPH or long acting analogues) in older (75 and older) frail or disabled patients with diabetes using continuous glucose monitoring system.
- Detailed Description
Increased prevalence of diabetes mellitus is in large part related to ageing: in France in 2009, 26% of patients with diabetes were 75 older or over. Moreover, diabetes prevalence is particularly high among institutionalized subjects with more than half of them treated with insulin.
Diabetes is source of activities limitations and participation restriction from the early stages of the disease and is responsible for 10% of direct health costs, with higher costs for older patients or insulin treated patients.
Older patients with diabetes may be robust (fully independent), frail or disabled. Studies with patients of 75 years or older included mainly robust subjects. Nevertheless older patients with diabetes are more frequently frail and a large proportion have a different metabolic profile than younger ones: they are leaner and present more often with beta-cellular insufficiency. Frail or dependent patients may also have different nutritional status than robust ones. Thus, this is difficult to extrapolate what is known about glycaemic profile in robust and young older (65-74 years old) insulin-treated patients to frail and dependent older ones (\>74 years).
Continuous blood glucose monitoring systems give the opportunity to measure around the day the blood glucose variations in real-life and particularly nocturnal hypoglycaemia for these patients treated with various types of basal insulins.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 30
- Age> or equal to 75 years,
- Diabetes mellitus diagnosed or Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) > 7% or 2 fasting blood glucose > to 1.26g/l,
- Treated with basal insulin associated or not with metformin (one or two injections per day, in the morning and/or evening before meals)
- Subject affiliated or beneficiary of a social security system,
- Free consent, informed and signed by the participant or by the surrogate of the patient and the investigator,
- Patient in the 4th or higher categories of frailty according to Rockwood .
- Refusal of wearing a continuous glucose monitoring system,
- Total autonomy (mobility according to Rosow and Breslau scale, instrumental activities of daily living according to Lawton scale, activities of daily living according to Barthel score),
- Treatment with insulinosecretors Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitor, Glucagon-like peptide-1 analogues, sulfonylurea) or rapid insulin (human or rapid analogue),
- Daily dose of basal insulin with change of 20% or more in the last 7 days,
- Current treatment with corticosteroids,
- Acute pathology in the last 7 days :
- Infection treated with antibiotic
- New stroke in the last 7 days
- Cardio-respiratory decompensation: change in daily dose of diuretics or oxygenotherapy during the last 7 days,
- Clinically unstable patients according judgement of investigator,
- Behavioural disturbances like Agitation/Aggressivity according the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI),
- All people who are under legal protection,
- All people who will be not able to finish the follow of the study,
- Currently participating in another clinical trial investigating.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Long-acting basal insulin analogues Insulin - Human Neutral Protamine Hagedorn (NPH) Insulin The inclusion will be stratified into 2 groups according to the type of basal insulin being at baseline (ratio 1: 1): NPH human insulin / Long-acting basal insulin analogues. The type of insulin will not be changed by this protocol.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Intraday glycemic variability measured by the average of MAGE index (Mean amplitude of glycemic excursions) everyday of exploitable recording by the participant. 5 days
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Inter-day glucose variability assessed by Mean Differences of Daily per participant for every day of exploitable recording 5 days Intraday glycemic variability measured by the average standard deviation of blood glucose every day of exploitable recording by the participant 5 days Average number of nocturnal hypoglycemia, defined by blood glucose < 0.60g / l between 22h and 7h for every day of exploitable recording 5 days Average time (minutes / day) per day pass in hypoglycemia (<0.60g / l) 5 days Functional Status: a composite outcome measure consisting of multiple measures with scale Rosow and Breslau, Lawton Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale, score of Barthel for Activities of Daily Living score evaluation and SPPB Scale At inclusion Evaluation of Cognition with Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) At inclusion Fragility level (Rockwood criteria) At inclusion Average number of diurnal hypoglycaemia defined by blood glucose <0.60g / l from 7am to 22 pm for all exploitable recording days 5 days Nutritional status: a composite outcome measure consisting of multiple measures with Mini Nutritional Assessment, calf circumference, abdominal circumference, albumin At inclusion
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
University Hospital of Bordeaux - Xavier Arnozan Hospital
🇫🇷Pessac, France