Effectiveness of Sensor-Augmented Insulin-Pump Therapy in Type 1 Diabetes

Richard M. Bergenstal(Park Nicollet Clinic), William V. Tamborlane(Yale University), Andrew Ahmann(Oregon Health & Science University), John B. Buse(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), George Dailey(Scripps Research Institute), Stephen N. Davis(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Carol Joyce(Memorial University of Newfoundland), Tim Peoples(Medtronic (Ireland)), Bruce A. Perkins(Toronto General Hospital), John Welsh(Medtronic (Ireland)), Steven M. Willi(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Michael A. Wood(Helen DeVos Children's Hospital)
New England Journal of Medicine
June 29, 2010
Cited by 893Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recently developed technologies for the treatment of type 1 diabetes mellitus include a variety of pumps and pumps with glucose sensors. METHODS: In this 1-year, multicenter, randomized, controlled trial, we compared the efficacy of sensor-augmented pump therapy (pump therapy) with that of a regimen of multiple daily insulin injections (injection therapy) in 485 patients (329 adults and 156 children) with inadequately controlled type 1 diabetes. Patients received recombinant insulin analogues and were supervised by expert clinical teams. The primary end point was the change from the baseline glycated hemoglobin level. RESULTS: At 1 year, the baseline mean glycated hemoglobin level (8.3% in the two study groups) had decreased to 7.5% in the pump-therapy group, as compared with 8.1% in the injection-therapy group (P<0.001). The proportion of patients who reached the glycated hemoglobin target (<7%) was greater in the pump-therapy group than in the injection-therapy group. The rate of severe hypoglycemia in the pump-therapy group (13.31 cases per 100 person-years) did not differ significantly from that in the injection-therapy group (13.48 per 100 person-years, P=0.58). There was no significant weight gain in either group. CONCLUSIONS: In both adults and children with inadequately controlled type 1 diabetes, sensor-augmented pump therapy resulted in significant improvement in glycated hemoglobin levels, as compared with injection therapy. A significantly greater proportion of both adults and children in the pump-therapy group than in the injection-therapy group reached the target glycated hemoglobin level. (Funded by Medtronic and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00417989.)


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