| Literature DB >> 29600507 |
Lawrence Blonde1, Luigi Meneghini2, Xuejun Victor Peng3, Anders Boss3, Kyu Rhee4, Alka Shaunik3, Supriya Kumar4, Sidhartha Balodi4, Claire Brulle-Wohlhueter3, Rory J McCrimmon5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Basal insulin (BI) plays an important role in treating type 2 diabetes (T2D), especially when oral antidiabetic (OAD) medications are insufficient for glycemic control. We conducted a retrospective, observational study using electronic medical records (EMR) data from the IBM® Explorys database to evaluate the probability of achieving glycemic control over 24 months after BI initiation in patients with T2D in the USA.Entities:
Keywords: Basal insulin; IBM Explorys database; Real-world evidence; Type 2 diabetes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29600507 PMCID: PMC5984916 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-018-0413-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Fig. 1Patient selection from the database. BI basal insulin, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, OAD oral antidiabetic, T2D type 2 diabetes
Baseline demographics and characteristics of the study cohort and overall T2D cohorts in the Explorys database
| T2D patients in the US IBM Explorys database as of November 3, 2017 ( | Study cohort at time of BI initiation ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Female, | 2.27 M (53) | 3042 (46) |
| Mean age ± SD, years | 58 ± 15.7 | 62 ± 12.7 |
| Median age, years | 60 | 62 |
| ≥65 years, | 1.65 M (38.7) | 3042 (43) |
| Race, | ||
| White | 2.6 M (61) | 4979 (75) |
| African-American | 574 K (14) | 882 (13) |
| Asian | 85 K (2) | 67 (1) |
| Ethnicity, | ||
| Hispanic/Latino | 243 K (6) | 466 (7) |
| Unknown | 1.1 M (27) | 318 (5) |
| Insurance, | ||
| Private | 1.6 M (38) | 3099 (47) |
| Medicare | 1.1 M (27) | 2377 (36) |
| Self-pay | 185 K (5) | 192 (3) |
| Medicaid | 241 K (6) | 425 (7) |
| Unknown | 1 M (23) | 205 (3) |
| Comorbidity, | ||
| Hypertension | 2.6 M (62) | 5336 (81) |
| Dyslipidemia | 1.3 M (30) | 3308 (50) |
| Obesity | 2.1 M (50) | 4671 (70) |
| Anemia | 1 M (24) | 1352 (20) |
| Heart disease | 1 M (23) | 1584 (24) |
| Prescription medication, | ||
| OADs | N/A | 6597 (100) |
| Metformin | N/A | 5206 (79) |
| Sulfonylureas | N/A | 4135 (63) |
| DPP4 inhibitors | N/A | 2006 (30) |
| TZDs | N/A | 1561 (24) |
| SGLT-2 inhibitors | N/A | 206 (3) |
| BI | N/A | 6597 (100) |
BI basal insulin, DPP4 dipeptidyl peptidase 4, K thousand, M million, OAD oral antidiabetic, SD standard deviation, SGLT-2 sodium–glucose cotransporter 2, T2D type 2 diabetes, TZD thiazolidinedione
Baseline characteristics of subcohorts at time of BI initiation
| BI only | BI + 1 OAD | BI + 2 OADs | BI + ≥3 OADs | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients | 1319 (20) | 2658 (40) | 2024 (31) | 596 (9) | 6597 (100) |
| Female, % | 50 | 48 | 44 | 38 | 46 |
| Mean ± SD age, years | 64.5 ± 12.5 | 61.6 ± 13.1 | 60.8 ± 12.4 | 61.3 ± 11.5 | 61.9 ± 12.7 |
| Mean ± SD HbA1c at BI initiation, % | 8.7 ± 2.0 | 9.3 ± 2.2 | 9.3 ± 2.0 | 9.1 ± 2.0 | 9.1a ± 2.1 |
| Mean ± SD BMI at BI initiation, kg/m2 | 33.2 ± 7.8 | 33.5 ± 7.6 | 33.8 ± 7.6 | 33.8 ± 7.3 | 33.6 ± 7.6 |
BI basal insulin, BMI body mass index, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, OAD oral antidiabetic, SD standard deviation
aAt baseline, 3219 (48.8%) of the 6597 patients had an HbA1c > 9.0%
HbA1c change over time in the first 2 years post-BI initiation
| Duration post-BI initiation | Number of patients with HbA1c records in this period | HbA1c change from baseline, mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|
| 0–6 months | 5679 | − 1.49 (2.63) |
| 6–12 months | 3600 | − 1.43 (2.69) |
| 12–18 months | 861 | − 1.44 (2.69) |
| 18–24 months | 331 | − 1.49 (2.88) |
Only those with a valid HbA1c record at baseline and the corresponding time period were included for the calculations. Few patients had multiple HbA1c records across two or more periods post-BI initiation
BI basal insulin, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, SD standard deviation
Fig. 2Percentage of patients reaching their first HbA1c < 7% post-BI initiation. The numerator is defined as the number of patients who reached glycemic control (HbA1c < 7%) for the first time during each corresponding quarter; the denominator is defined as the number of patients who did not reach glycemic control prior to that quarter AND were still on BI treatment AND had at least one valid electronic medical records entry in that quarter. BI basal insulin, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin
Conditional probability of reaching first glycemic control (HbA1c < 7%)
| A: time after BI initiation | B: number of patients who had not reached glycemic control previously AND were still on BI treatment within this quarter | C: number of patients who had not reached glycemic control previously AND were still on BI treatment AND had at least one valid HbA1c record within this quarter | D: number of patients who reached their first glycemic control within this quarter | E: percentage (%) of patients in column D among the patients in column B | F: estimated conditional probability (% of patients in column D among patients in column C), % (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3–6 months | 6086 | 4933 | 1311 | 21.5 | 26.6 (25.4, 27.8) |
| 6–9 months | 4102 | 2767 | 487 | 11.9 | 17.6 (16.2, 19.0) |
| 9–12 months | 2423 | 1668 | 143 | 5.9 | 8.6 (7.3, 9.9) |
| 12–15 months | 1679 | 684 | 37 | 2.2 | 5.4 (3.7, 7.1) |
| 15–18 months | 597 | 361 | 22 | 3.7 | 6.1 (3.6, 8.6) |
| 18–21 months | 365 | 260 | 14 | 3.8 | 5.4 (2.7, 8.1) |
| 21–24 months | 216 | 147 | 5 | 2.3 | 3.4 (0.5, 6.3) |
BI basal insulin, CI confidence interval, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier curves for time to reach glycemic control (HbA1c < 7%) for the overall study cohort and the four subcohorts. BI basal insulin, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, OAD oral antidiabetic