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Insulin Pump Therapy in Adolescents With Very Poor Glycemic Control During a 12-Month Cohort Trial

We conclude that insulin pump therapy can be an effective tool to improve glycemic control in adolescents with long-standing treatment resistance

Citation:
de Bock M, Rossborough J, Siafarikas A, Evans M, Clapin H, Smith G, Jones TW, Davis EA. Insulin Pump Therapy in Adolescents With Very Poor Glycemic Control During a 12-Month Cohort Trial. J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2018;12(5):1080-1

Keywords:
Adolescents; glycemic control; insulin pump therapy; type 1 diabetes

Abstract:
Adolescence is a challenging time for managing diabetes, with recent data from the type 1 diabetes (T1D) exchange highlighting teenagers have the highest risk of poor glycemic control. Insulin pump therapy (CSII) is a standard treatment modality for patients with type 1 diabetes but caution in the use of CSII therapy in this group stems from the potential for metabolic decompensation to diabetic ketoacidosis because of the sole use of rapid acting insulin, or secondary to experience bias that is in conflict with published data supporting the use of CSII. To evaluate the safety and efficacy of CSII in adolescents (aged 14-17 years) with T1D for > 1 year, insulin pump naïve and with very poor glycemic control (defined for this study as an average HbA1c >10.0% in the preceding 6 months) we conducted a prospective cohort study over a 12-month period.