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Background: Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is a chronic disease that affects millions of people worldwide. More than 95% of cases are type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). In recent years, diabetes management has evolved with the introduction of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) devices. These devices implanted under the skin allow continuous measurement of glucose levels monitoring glucose trends and the rate at which glucose level rise and fall without the need for capillary glycaemias test. While studies demostrate the effectiveness of CGM devices in controlling glucose levels in adults with T2DM, there is no evidence related to quality of life in this patients.
Hypothesis: The use of CGM in people with T2DM improves their quality of life, reduces distress about the disease, reduces fear of hypoglycaemia, increases detection of hypoglycaemia, and improves metabolic control.
Objectives: To assess quality of life, diabetes distress, fear of hypoglycaemia, detection of hypoglycaemia, and metabolic control in people with T2DM before and after the use of CGM sensors.
Methodology: Prospective observational pre-post unblinded study. Adults with type 2 diabetes using a CGM device in the primary care setting will be followed for 12 months. They will be asked to complete 5 questionnaires at baseline, and 4 questionnaires at 3, 6 and 12 months. No other activity that differs from usual clinical practice will be performed.
Data analysis: a descriptive analysis of the main study variables will be carried out and the differences in the data before and after the intervention will be analysed using the chi-square test for qualitative variables, and the Student's t-test for quantitative variables. Statistical significance will be accepted at a p-value < 0.05.
Applicability and relevance: The results of the study will provide information on whether CGM devices improve quality of life and glycaemic control in people with type 2 diabetes. With these results it will be possible to assess whether it is beneficial to extend funding for CGM devices to more of the population than is currently the case.
Full description
Study development: The recruitment period runs from September 2024 to February 2025. Participants will be recruited by health professionals (nurse or doctor) CGM referents from each of the 20 primary care centres in the Camp de Tarragona health region. Sampling will be by convenience, all persons who meet the inclusion criteria and none of the exclusion criteria will be offered to participate in the study. Participants must sign an informed consent and their data will be coded.
Participants will be asked to fill in 5 questionnaires at the beginning of the study:
The EsDQOL, DDS17, EsHFS and Clarke Test questionnaires must be repeated at 3, 6 and 12 months after the start of the study. Participants will be called to their primary care centre of reference to fill in the questionnaires themselves and these will be kept on paper at the centre until data analysis.
To assess metabolic control, the data provided by the CGM sensor will be used and the results of the AGP (Ambulatory Glucose Profile) report of the first 2 weeks will be compared with the data at 3, 6 and 12 months. No analytical tests or capillary blood glucose measurements will be requested.
Data analysis: A descriptive analysis of the main study variables will be performed using percentages for qualitative variables and mean and standard deviation for quantitative variables. To analyse the differences in the data before and after the intervention, chi-square tests will be used for qualitative variables and the Student's t-test for quantitative variables. Statistical significance will be accepted with a p-value <0.05. Data will be analysed using SPSS statistical software version 23 or later.
Sample calculation: Accepting an alpha risk of 0.05 and a statistical power greater than 0.8 in a bilateral contrast, 55 subjects are required to detect as statistically significant a difference equal to or greater than 9 units in the EsDQOL questionnaire (main study variable). A common standard deviation of 23.65 is estimated. A loss to follow-up rate of 0% is estimated. [GRANMO sample size calculator v7.10 available at Calculator (laalamedilla.org)].
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55 participants in 1 patient group
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Sergi Rodríguez-Soler, Nurse
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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