| Literature DB >> 27457238 |
Allen B King1, Akio Kuroda2, Munehide Matsuhisa2, Todd Hobbs3.
Abstract
Dosing guidelines for patients with type 1 diabetes using continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII), which are historically based on clinical experience and retrospective studies of patients consuming an American diet, recommend that basal insulin should represent approximately 50 % of the total daily dose (TDD). Recent prospective studies in the USA and Japan conclude that the more appropriate proportion is closer to 30-40 % of TDD. In addition, currently used formulas for calculating the carbohydrate-to-insulin ratio (CIR) and correction factor (CF) may lead to underdosing of bolus insulin by as much as 12.8-50 % for a hypothetical patient. The discrepancies between traditional formulas and data from newer studies can be accounted for by the more rigorous design of the newer studies (e.g., prospective design, controlled diets, meal omission, and frequent glucose monitoring). International differences in diet composition may also be important to consider when developing dosing recommendations for CSII.Entities:
Keywords: Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion; Dosing formulas; Insulin pump; Insulin-dosing guidelines; Type 1 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27457238 PMCID: PMC4960276 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-016-0772-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Definition of parameters used in formulas for establishing proper daily insulin dose in CSII
| Parameter | Definition |
|---|---|
| TDD | The total of basal and bolus insulin dosage in U/day |
| TBD | The fraction of TDD given as basal insulin in U/day |
| CIR | A number that, when divided into the number of grams of carbohydrates to be consumed, yields the units of insulin needed to lower blood glucose to a pre-meal level within 2–4 h. CIR is usually between 5 and 20 g of carbohydrates/U |
| CF | A number that, when divided into the difference between actual and target blood glucose, indicates the number of extra units of insulin necessary to bring glucose within target range, within 2–4 h. CF is usually between 20 and 100 mg/dL/U |
Source: [14]
Patients with greater insulin sensitivity will have higher CFs and CIRs
CF correction factor, CIR carbohydrate-to-insulin ratio, CSII continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion, TBD total basal dose, TDD total daily dose
Evolution of dosing formulas for insulin therapy
| Study | TBD | CIR | CF | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical | Skyler et al. 1982 [ | ∼40 % TDD | ||
| Davidson 1982 (see Davidson et al. 2008) [ | 1500/TDD | |||
| Steed 1998 (cited in Davidson et al. 2008) [ | (3 × wt lb)/TDD | |||
| Retrospective | Davidson et al. 2003 [ | 48 % × TDD | (2.8 × wt lb)/TDD | 1724/TDD |
| Davidson et al. 2008 [ | 47 % × TDD | 441/TDDa or (2.8 × wt lb)/TDD | 1694/TDD | |
| Walsh et al. 2010 [ | 47.6 % × TDD | (2.6 × wt lb)/TDD | 1960/TDD | |
| Alcantara-Aragon et al. 2015 [ | 58 % × TDD | 350–400/TDD | NR | |
| Pankowska et al. 2008 (pediatric) [ | 27.7 % × TDD | NR | NR | |
| Alemzadeh et al. 2012 (pediatric) [ | 28 % × TDD | 13.5 × BW kg/TDD | 2800/TDD | |
| Prospective | King and Armstrong 2007a,b [ | 38.4 % × TDD | (217/TDD) + 3 | (1076/TDD) + 12 |
| Kuroda et al. 2011 [ | 27.7 × TDD | NR | NR | |
| Kuroda et al. 2012 [ | 27.0 × TDD | 300–400/TDD | NR | |
| King 2010 [ | 40 % × TDD | 300/TDD | 1500/TDD | |
| King et al. 2012a [ | 33 % × TDD | 90/TBD | NR | |
| King et al. 2012c [ | 33.9 % × TDD | 365/TDD | ||
| Nakamura et al. 2014 [ | 27.3 % × TDD | 300–500/TDD |
CF correction factor, CIR carbohydrate-to-insulin ratio, NR not reported, TBD total basal dose, TDD total daily dose
aFor calculation of TDD, patients with type 2 diabetes were excluded