| Literature DB >> 22999494 |
Jennifer M Polinski1, Bradley H Curtis, John D Seeger, Niteesh K Choudhry, Anthony Zagar, William H Shrank.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although consensus guidelines recommend insulin progression among patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) who fail to meet glycemic targets over time, many fewer patients are progressed than may benefit. We describe the rationale and design of the MOSAIc (Multinational Observational Study Assessing Insulin use) study, a multinational observational cohort study to identify patient-, physician, and health care environment-based factors associated with insulin progression for patients with T2DM in real-world practice. METHODS/Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22999494 PMCID: PMC3545975 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6823-12-20
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Endocr Disord ISSN: 1472-6823 Impact factor: 2.763
Proposed secondary research objectives
| • Glycemic control |
| • Hypoglycemia |
| • Treatment adherence |
| • Diabetes-related health care utilization |
| • Diabetes-related health costs |
| • Insulin progression rates |
| • Insulin treatment modality (pen, syringe, pump) |
| • Glycemic control |
| • Patterns of T2DM treatment |
| • Fasting for religious/cultural reasons |
| • Health-related quality of life |
| • Diabetes self-care |
| • Diabetes knowledge |
| • Insulin progression |
| • Glycemic control |
| • Hypoglycemia |
| • Diabetes self-care |
| • Diabetes knowledge |
| • Treatment adherence |
| • Cardiovascular outcomes |
| • Hypoglycemia |
| • Health-related quality of life |
| • Diabetes distress |
| • Diabetes self-care |
| • Health care resource utilization |
| • Health care costs |
Purposive practice site recruitment strategy
| Southeast Asia | 8.1% | China | 968,975 | 9.0% | 11 | 2 | 9 |
| India | 737,003 | 9.2% | 26 | 10 | 16 | ||
| Japan | 95,341 | 7.9% | 7 | 4 | 3 | ||
| South Korea | 36,204 | 7.7% | 6 | 4 | 2 | ||
| | | | | | 50 | 20 | 30 |
| Europe | 10% | Germany | 62,810 | 5.5% | 8 | 2 | 6 |
| Italy | 45,637 | 5.3% | 6 | 1 | 5 | ||
| Russia | 109,167 | 10.0% | 12 | 10 | 2 | ||
| Spain | 34,896 | 6.5% | 6 | 1 | 5 | ||
| United Kingdom | 44,813 | 5.4% | 6 | 1 | 5 | ||
| | | | | | 38 | 15 | 23 |
| North America | 12.1% | Canada | 25,141 | 8.7% | 6 | 1 | 5 |
| United States | 216,805 | 9.6% | 30 | 6 | 24 | ||
| Puerto Rico | 2,547 | 13.3% | 4 | 2 | 2 | ||
| | | | | | 40 | 9 | 31 |
| Middle East/North Africa | 10.8% | Abu Dhabi | 6,107 | 19.2% | 6 | 9 | 31 |
| Israel | 4,708 | 7.6% | 6 | 1 | 5 | ||
| Saudi Arabia | 17,023 | 20.0% | 6 | 3 | 3 | ||
| Turkey | 47,322 | 8.1% | 11 | 2 | 9 | ||
| | | | | | 29 | 7 | 22 |
| South/Central America | 7.8% | Argentina | 26,265 | 5.7% | 6 | 5 | 1 |
| Brazil | 127,995 | 10.4% | 6 | 1 | 5 | ||
| Mexico | 69,324 | 15.9% | 6 | 2 | 4 | ||
| | | | | | 18 | 8 | 10 |
*Age standardized. Obtained from the International Diabetes Federation Diabetes Atlas [17].
Patient self-reported measures and frequency of collection in the 24 month study period
| Blood glucose monitoring practices | X | | | | |
| Brief Diabetes Knowledge Test
[ | X | | X | | X |
| Diabetes Distress Scale
[ | X | | X | X | X |
| Experience with Insulin Therapy Questionnaire
[ | X | | X | | X |
| Hypoglycemia and Fasting Survey (designed by the study team) | X | X | | X | X |
| Insulin Cost Questionnaire (designed by the study team) | X | X | X | X | X |
| Insulin Specific Adherence Questionnaire (designed by the study team) | X | X | X | X | X |
| Summary of Diabetes Self-Care Activities
[ | X | X | | X | X |
| Depression diagnosis question | X | | | X | |
| Barratt Simplified Measure of Social Status Education question | X | | | X | |
| Barratt Simplified Measure of Social Status Occupational Status question | X | | | X | |
| MacArthur Income Questionnaire | X | | | X | |
| Perceived Social Support Scale | X | | | X | |
| Perceived Stress Scale | X | | | X | |
| Psychological Health Questionnaire | X | | | X | |
| Self-reported health questions (EQ-5D)
[ | X | | | X | |
| Total Illness Burden Index | | | | X | |
| Subjective Social Economic Status | | | | X | |
| Smoking and alcohol use | X | | | | |
| Participation in physical exercise | X | | | | |
| Insurance to pay for prescription medications question | X | | | | |
| Interpersonal Processes of Care Survey
[ | X | | X | X | |
| Physician: treatment preferences and goals | |||||
Outcome definitions for insulin progression, based on initial insulin therapy
| Basal alone or in combination with any approved non-insulin anti-diabetic medications | Addition of prandial insulin (≥1 injection: basal plus or basal-bolus) |
| Additional injections | |
| - QD to BID administration of NPH | |
| - Insulin glargine[Lantus]/Insulin levemir[Determir] | |
| - ILPS or insulin mixtures | |
| - Intermediate-acting NPH | |
| Mixtures | |
| - human/animal/analog premixed insulin (combination of short- and long-acting insulin in the same formulation) | |
| Addition of a GLP-1 | |
| Addition of oral medications | |
| Basal Insulin plus additional insulin therapy (less than a full basal-bolus regimen (basal + <3 prandial injections)) or in combination with any approved non-insulin anti-diabetic medications | Additional insulin injections (e.g., 1 to 2 injections, or 2 to 3 injections) |
| Basal-bolus regimen | |
| Addition of a GLP-1 | |
| Addition of oral medications | |
| Insulin mixtures alone or in combination with any approved non-insulin anti-diabetic medications | Additional insulin injections (e.g., 1 to 2 injections, or 2 to 3 injections) |
| Basal-bolus regimen | |
| Addition of a GLP-1 | |
| Addition of oral medications |
Abbreviations: BID = twice a day; GLP-1 = glucagon-like peptide 1; ILPS = insulin lispro protamine suspension; NPH = neutral protamine Hagedorn; QD = every day.
aReferrals to a specialist (eg, endocrinologist) for progression of therapy will be captured.
bFor the purpose of this study, progression will be defined as the first progression from initial therapy (as defined above).
The 50 patient-, provider-, and health environment-specific variables included in the insulin progression prediction model
| 1 Age |
| 2 Gender |
| 3 Education |
| 4 Marriage Status |
| 5 Work Status |
| 6 Duration of type II diabetes |
| 7 Body mass index (BMI)* |
| 8 Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)* |
| 9 Low-density lipoprotein (LDL)* |
| 10 High-density lipoprotein (HDL)* |
| 11 Urine microalbumin to serum creatinine ratio* |
| 12 Systolic blood pressure* |
| 13 Number of days blood sugar was tested in the past week* |
| 14 Daily units basal or intermediate insulin* |
| 15 Daily units short-acting (regular) insulin* |
| 16 Metformin use † |
| 17 Use of a sulfonurea † |
| 18 Use of a glitazone † |
| 19 Use of another oral antidiabetic drug † |
| 20 Use of an ACE inhibitor ‡ |
| 21 Use of an ARB ‡ |
| 22 Use of a thiazide ‡ |
| 23 Use of a beta blocker ‡ |
| 24 Hypertension |
| 25 Cardiovascular diseasea |
| 26 Diabetes complicationsb |
| 27 Hypoglycemia |
| 28 Insulin-specific Adherence Questionnaire summary score |
| 29 |
| 30 |
| 31 |
| 32 Number of days on which patient exercised during the last 7 days |
| 33 Insurance to pay for drugs |
| 34 Number of hospitalizations due to diabetes, including MI and ESRD |
| 35 Number of diabetes-related visits to physician who treats patient’s diabetes |
| 36 Number of visits to an auxiliary diabetes provider |
| 37 Age |
| 38 Gender |
| 39 Practice affiliation (Academic versus non-academic) |
| 40 Practice location (Urban versus rural) |
| 41 Practice time dedicated to diabetes (patients/month) |
| 42 Practice size |
| 43 Practice type (primary care/internal medicine versus diabetologist/endocrinologist) |
| 44 Prescribing choices and preferences Score |
| 45 Patient Relationship with Health Care Provider € |
| 46 Physician’s target HbA1c level for this patient £ |
| 47 Experience with Insulin Treatment Questionnaire Score € |
| 48 Diabetes Self Care Activities Survey Score € |
| 49 Diabetes Knowledge Test Score € |
| 50 Diabetes Distress Scale Score € |
a Definition includes presence of any of: transient ischemic attack, stroke, congestive heart failure, arrhythmia, coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, peripheral arterial occlusive disease.
b Definition includes presence of any of: retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, hyperlipidemia, diabetic coma, hyperglycemic hypermolar nonketototic syndrome, amputation, arthritis, cancer/malignancy, depression, gastroparesis, diabetic foot, other skin infections, and oral infections, pyelonephritis, pneumonia, erectile dysfunction.
* Most recent values within the 6 months prior to the baseline visit, as recorded in the patient’s medical record.
† Ever use or concomitant use at the day prior to the baseline visit, either from self-report or the patient’s medical record.
‡ Concurrent use reported at the baseline visit via self-report or the patient’s medical record.
§ Determined via self-report at the baseline visit or from the patient’s medical record.
€ Via patient self-report at the baseline visit.
∫ Via physician self-report at the practice site enrollment.
£ Via physician self-report at the patient’s baseline visit.