| Literature DB >> 34882273 |
Tamara K Oser1, Michelle L Litchman2, Nancy A Allen2, Bethany M Kwan1, Lawrence Fisher3, Bonnie T Jortberg1, William H Polonsky4, Sean M Oser5.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This article reviews recent clinical efficacy research and economic analysis of the use of personal continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in type 2 diabetes (T2D). RECENTEntities:
Keywords: CGM; Continuous glucose monitor; Diabetes technology; Economics; Type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34882273 PMCID: PMC8655087 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-021-01408-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Studies of CGM use in T2D, 2016–2021
| Author/year | Aim(s) | Sample | Main outcomes | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized controlled trials | ||||
| Beck, 2017 [ | Determine effectiveness of rtCGM vs. usual care (SMBG at least 4 times a day) Intervention group received general guidelines about using CGM and their clinicians individualized recommendations about incorporating CGM trend information into their diabetes management | 253 participants Age ≥ 25 (mean age 60) Median diabetes duration = 17 years T2D treated with MDI for ≥ 1 year Baseline A1c 7.5–10.0 (mean = 8.5) Stable diabetes medications and weight over prior 3 months | Clinical: Change in A1c, baseline to 24 weeks Other A1c and CGM outcomes, weight Psychosocial: General QoL, hypoglycemia unawareness, fear of hypoglycemia, diabetes distress, hypoglycemia confidence | Clinical: CGM use sustained at 6.7 days/week in month 6 Adjusted difference in mean change in A1c = − 0.3% ( Median CGM TIR increased from 802 to 882 min/day in CGM group and 794 to 836 min/day in control group, reflecting a greater reduction in time above range in the CGM group and a reduction in time below range in the CGM group with no change in time below range in control group Weight: CGM group experienced a 1.3 kg weight gain and a 0.2 kg weight loss in control group Psychosocial: No difference in QoL, fear of hypoglycemia, diabetes distress, hypoglycemia confidence, or hypoglycemia unawareness |
| Haak, 2017 [ | Assess safety and efficacy of isCGM to replace SMBG | 224 participants with type 2 diabetes on intensive insulin therapy randomized 2:1 to isCGM or SMBG Intervention participants entered additional 6-month follow-on phase after initial 6-month RCT | Primary: change in A1c from baseline to 6 months Secondary: time in hypoglycemia, effect of age, patient satisfaction, at 6 months At 12 months: time in range, time in hypoglycemia, nocturnal hypoglycemia, frequency of SMBG checks | Change in A1c: No difference in full sample between CGM (− 0.29%) and SMBG (− 0.31%), Significant difference for participants age < 65 years between CGM (− 0.53) and SMBG (− 0.20), Time in hypoglycemia: Time below 70 mg/dL: reduced for CGM compared to SMBG (reduced 43% from baseline or − 0.47 h/day, Time below 55 mg/dL: reduced for CGM compared to SMBG (reduced 53% from baseline or − 0.22 h/day, Treatment satisfaction was higher for CGM than for SMBG ( In the 6-month follow-on, at 12 months, there was no change in TIR; time below 70 mg/dL was reduced by 50% or − 0.70 h/day over baseline, |
| Ruedy, 2017 [ | Determine the effectiveness of rtCGM in adults ≥ 60 years old with T1D or T2D using insulin via MDI | 116 participants ≥ 60 years old (mean 67 years) with T1D (34) or T2D (82) using MDI therapy for at least 1 year and with baseline HbA1c 7.5–10.0% randomized to rtCGM or SMBG (4 + checks/day) for 24 weeks. Baseline HbA1c 8.5 | Primary: change in HbA1c at 24 weeks Secondary: time < 60 mg/dL, time > 250 mg/dL, time 70–180 mg/dL, CV at 12 and 24 weeks | HbA1c decreased more in CGM group (− 0.9%) than in SMBG group (− 0.5%) at 24 weeks; adjusted difference in mean change in HbA1c − 0.4%, There were significantly greater improvements in mean glucose, time in range, and time in hyperglycemia in the CGM group compared to the SMBG group at 24 weeks No differences were seen between groups in time in hypoglycemia, but there was very little time in hypoglycemia at baseline, limiting ability to detect a significant difference |
| Wada, 2020 [ | Evaluate isCGM compared to SMBG in patients with T2D not treated with insulin | 100 adults with T2D not treated with insulin and not using CGM or SMBG randomized to receive isCGM or SMBG Devices (CGM or SMBG) were available to participants for 12 weeks | Primary: change in HbA1c at 12 and 24 weeks Secondary: changes in other clinical measures (e.g., BMI, BP, FPG, HDL, CGM metrics including time < 70 mg/dL, time < 55 mg/dL, TIR, time > 180 mg/dL, time > 240 mg/dL, time > 300 mg/dL, mean glucose, glucose variability (SD, CV, MAGE, BGRI, CONGA, MODD) Non-biologic: change in treatment satisfaction | A1c reduced from baseline to 12 weeks for CGM (− 0.43, Significant differences were seen between CGM and SMBG for decreases in mean glucose (− 15 mg/dL, Significant difference between CGM and SMBG for increase in time in range (2.36 h/day, Time below range and CV did not change significantly Treatment satisfaction increased significantly for CGM compared to SMBG, with a difference increase of 3.4, |
| Martens, 2021 [ | Determine effectiveness of CGM in adults with T2D treated with basal insulin in primary care practices | 175 adults with T2D on basal-only insulin therapy, receiving diabetes care from a primary care physician, randomized 2:1 to CGM ( | Primary: HbA1c at 8 months Secondary: CGM-measured TIR, time > 250 mg/dL, mean glucose level at 8 months | Mean HbA1c decreased from 9.1 to 8.0% at 8 months in the CGM group, compared to 9.0% to 8.4% in the SMBG group (adjusted difference − 0.4%, TIR was 59% in the CGM group compared to 43% in the SMBG group (adjusted difference 15%, Time > 250 mg/dL was 11% in the CGM group compared to 27% in the SMBG group (adjusted difference − 16%, Mean glucose was 179 mg/dL in the CGM group compared to 206 mg/dL in the SMBG group (adjusted difference − 26 mg/dL, |
| Yaron, 2019 [ | Assess treatment satisfaction and effectiveness of isCGM in T2D patients using basal-bolus insulin | 101 participants with T2D on MDI insulin therapy randomized to isCGM or SMBG (4 + checks/day) for 10 weeks | Primary: treatment satisfaction Secondary: change in HbA1c, change in quality of life, percentage of participants reaching physician recommended personal A1c target, changes in hypoglycemia events (< 70 mg/dL and < 54 mg/dL) | Treatment satisfaction was high in both groups, with the observed difference not significant ( HbA1c reduced from baseline to 10 weeks more for CGM (-0.82%) than for SMBG (− 0.33%); unadjusted mean change − 0.49%, 69% of CGM group vs. 30% of SMBG group experienced HbA1c decrease of ≥ 0.5% 39% of CGM group vs. 19% of SMBG group experienced HbA1c decrease of ≥ 1.0% No difference seen in hypoglycemia, but CGM group hypoglycemia was based on CGM readings and self-report, while SMBG group hypoglycemia was based on SMBG readings and self-report |
| Davis, 2020 [ | Assess efficacy of isCGM compared with SMBG in reducing incidence of hypoglycemia among insulin-treated adults with a recently confirmed episode of clinically significant hypoglycemia | 59 adult participants with T2D (17), T1D (40), or LADA (2) treated with insulin and with event of symptomatic hypoglycemia with glucose < 72 mg/dL or of glucose < 54 mg/dL within 2 weeks prior to recruitment, randomized to isCGM or SMBG for 6 months | Primary: hypoglycemia requiring second-party assistance Secondary: self-reported hypoglycemia, blood/interstitial glucose < 54 mg/dL, blood/interstitial glucose 54–70 mg/dL, blood/interstitial glucose < 72 mg/dL, change in HbA1c | No difference in severe hypoglycemia between CGM and SMBG groups Higher incidence in CGM than SMBG of any self-reported hypoglycemia (114 vs. 78 events/person-year, No difference in change in HbA1c between CGM and SMBG groups (− 0.21 vs. − 0.06, |
| Cox, 2020 [ | Compare conventional medication management of T2D to medication management plus GEM lifestyle intervention plus rtCGM | RCT of 30 adults with T2D not treated with insulin, with HbA1c > 7.0 | Primary: change in HbA1c from baseline to 6 months WHO QoL, diabetes empowerment, DDS, glucose monitoring satisfaction survey | Intervention participants experienced a greater decrease in HbA1c than controls (mean difference –1.2%, p = .03), which decreased from 8.9 to 7.6% and 8.8 to 8.7%, respectively Intervention participants experienced significant benefits compared to controls on secondary outcome measures including WHO QoL (psychological subscale), diabetes empowerment, diabetes distress (emotional and regimen subscales), and glucose monitoring satisfaction |
| Meta-analyses evaluating change in glycemia | ||||
| Park, 2018 [ | Synthesize evidence of effectiveness of CGM in adults with T2D | 7 RCTs and 3 cohort studies: 8 studies involving 1384 participants for rtCGM and proCGM, and 2 studies involving 4902 subjects for isCGM | Difference in HbA1c change between CGM and controls | rtCGM and proCGM were associated with a greater reduction in HbA1c compared to controls; standard mean difference − 0.20 (95% CI − 0.09 to − 0.31) among all 8 rtCGM/proCGM studies (7 RCTs and 1 cohort study), and − 0.33 (95% CI − 0.13 to − 0.52) among the 7 RCTs Pooled analysis of 2 studies of isCGM (1 RCT, 1 case control) showed no difference between the CGM and control; standard mean difference [− 0.02% (95% CI − 0.07 to 0.04)] |
| Ida, 2019 [ | Investigate the effects of CGM on blood glucose levels, body weight, BP, and hypoglycemia in patients with T2D | 7 RCTs involving 669 participants: 3 involving rtCGM and 4 involving rCGM | Differences between CGM and controls in HbA1c change, body weight, BP, time in hypoglycemia < 70 mg/dL, and time in hyperglycemia > 180 mg/dL | CGM groups experienced lower HbA1c levels than controls: standard mean difference − 0.35, Time in hypoglycemia < 70 mg/dL was lower in CGM than controls, standard mean difference − 0.35 h/day, No differences were seen between CGM and controls in time in hyperglycemia > 180 mg/dL, BP, or body weight change |
| Janapala, 2019 [ | Evaluate the evidence of efficacy of CGM compared to SMBG in patients with T2D | 5 RCTs involving 374 participants | Differences between CGM and controls in HbA1c change | CGM groups experienced greater HbA1c reductions than controls: standard mean difference − 0.25%, |
| Evans, 2020 [ | Establish whether use of isCGM favors a reduction in HbA1c among people with T1D or T2D as a replacement for SMBG; identify whether change in HbA1c with isCGM is associated with baseline HbA1c; and determine whether HbA1c change with isCGM differs by length of study or by type of diabetes (T1D vs. T2D) | 21 studies (RCTs and real-world observational studies) involving 1496 participants with T1D and 227 participants with T2D | Differences between CGM and controls in HbA1c at 2, 3, or 4 months, and up to 12 months of follow-up | Mean HbA1c change for all subjects at 2–4 months was − 0.55% (95% CI − 0.39 to − 0.70) and for adult subjects was − 0.56% (95% CI − 0.36 to − 0.76) Mean HbA1c change was associated with baseline HbA1c; for each 1% higher in mean baseline HbA1c, mean HbA1c change at follow-up changed by − 0.31% (95% CI − 0.19 to − 0.43) No significant differences in mean HbA1c change were found between adults with T1D vs. adults with T2D Where longer follow-up could be evaluated, HbA1c was found to decrease within the first 2 months, with the change sustained at 12 months |
| Other studies | ||||
| Ish-Shalom, 2016 [ | Evaluate use of isCGM with T2D, HbA1c ≥ 7.5%, and other factors making their diabetes “difficult-to-control” | Cross-sectional study of 31 patients using MDI therapy (25 with T2D) followed for 12 weeks with isCGM | Change in HbA1c at 8, 12, and 24 weeks | HbA1c decreased for all subjects (T1D and T2D) at 8 weeks by − 1.33% ( All participants reported high satisfaction, desire to continue isCGM use, that isCGM was easy to use, and that it was painless |
| Cox, 2016 [ | Assess feasibility and efficacy of replacing SMBG with CGM to increase qualitative and quantitative feedback in the GEM lifestyle modification program | Pilot study of 4 adults with T2D for whom GEM was augmented with isCGM | Change in HbA1c, QoL (PAID-5) | Mean change in HbA1c was − 1.1% (from 7.8 to 6.7%), with a decrease in each participant. Despite a lower baseline mean HbA1c in this pilot, the mean HbA1c decrease was greater than in a prior pilot without CGM (− 1.0%, from 8.4 to 7.4%) Participants also experienced fewer diabetes-associated problems at follow-up, with a lower PAID-5 score post-intervention (3.3 for CGM/GEM vs. 5.8 for SMBG/GEM) and a greater decrease in PAID-5 score from baseline to post-intervention (− 3.2 for CGM/GEM vs. − 2.1 for SMBG/GEM) |
| Weiss, 2018 [ | Evaluate use of isCGM and effect on HbA1c in Australia | Cross-sectional study (clinical chart audit) of 22 patients (18 with T1D and 4 with T2D) using isCGM for ≥ 2 weeks | Change in HbA1c | The overall sample experienced HbA1c change of − 1.0%, from 8.7 to 7.7% ( The T2D subset ( |
| Hirsch, 2019 [ | Evaluate correlations of HbA1c with CGM metrics | Meta-analysis of 4 RCTs | Correlation of HbA1c with mean glucose, GMI, TIR, time > 250 mg/dL, time < 70 mg/dL, time < 54 mg/dL | HbA1c correlated strongly with mean glucose and GMI ( HbA1c correlated only weakly with time < 70 mg/dL ( |
| Kröger, 2020 [ | Evaluate the impact of isCGM on HbA1c in real-world use in each of 3 European countries among patients with T2D on basal-bolus insulin therapy | Analysis of 3 cross-sectional (chart review) studies involving 363 adults (92 in Austria, 88 in France, 183 in Germany) with T2D treated with basal-bolus insulin therapy for ≥ 1 year, with isCGM use for ≥ 3 months, and with HbA1c 8.0–12.0% at baseline | Change in HbA1c from baseline (≤ 3 months before starting CGM) to 3–6 months after starting CGM use | HbA1c decreased for the pooled participants from the 3 countries, from 8.9 to 8.0% (mean change − 0.9%, |
| Majithia, 2020 [ | Evaluate glycemic outcomes associated with participation in a virtual diabetes clinic for 4 months | Prospective single-arm analysis of 55 adults with T2D and HbA1c 8.0–12.0% and not using an insulin pump, enrolled from two primary care centers into a virtual diabetes clinic including telehealth endocrinologist consultation, a proprietary app for data management, virtual engagement with an education program, diabetes education and care specialists, coaches, and rtCGM worn intermittently for 60 days of the 4-month study period | Primary: change in HbA1c from baseline Secondary: changes from baseline in TIR, time 180–250 mg/dL, time > 250 mg/dL, time < 70 mg/dL, weight | Mean change in HbA1c was –1.6%, TIR increased 10.2% ( Time 180–250 mg/dL decreased 7.2% ( Time > 250 mg/dL decreased 3.0% ( There was no difference in time < 70 mg/dL Weight decreased by 9.0 pounds ( |
| Bergenstal, 2021 [ | Evaluate a virtual diabetes clinic’s participants’ attitudes toward remotely prescribed rtCGM and the relationship between rtCGM use and change in HbA1c | Observational study of 594 adult participants with T2D who participated in virtual diabetes clinic for CGM education and startup, used at least one provided rtCGM sensor, and with baseline HbA1c 7.7%, with mean follow-up of 10.2 months. 36.5% of respondents were treated with insulin, 25.8% were treated with sulfonylurea | CGM satisfaction and change in HbA1c from baseline | Mean CGM satisfaction score was 4.5 of 5. 94.7% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed that they were comfortable with remote CGM insertion, 97.0% agreed or strongly agreed that rtCGM use improved their understanding of the impact of eating, 95.7% agreed or strongly agreed that rtCGM use increased their knowledge, and 79.4% agreed or strongly agreed that rtCGM use helped improve their diabetes treatment even when not wearing a sensor Mean change in HbA1c was –0.6% (from 7.7% at baseline to 7.1% after a mean 10.2 months of follow-up), |
| Gilbert, 2021 [ | Quantify short-term changes in glycemia and quality of life in the first few months of CGM use | Observational study of 248 adults (182 with T1D, 66 with T2D) on basal-bolus insulin therapy who had not previously used CGM | Change in HbA1c and QoL indicators (diabetes distress evaluated by DDS, hypoglycemia concerns evaluated by HABS score) | Among only the participants with T2D: HbA1c decreased by 1.4% (from 8.5 to 7.1, Diabetes distress decreased overall and in the emotional burden, regimen distress, and interpersonal domains (all Hypoglycemia concerns decreased overall and in the avoidance and anxiety domains (all |
| Karter, 2021 [ | Estimate clinical outcomes of initiating rtCGM | Retrospective cohort study of 41,753 people with insulin-treated diabetes (36,080 T2D, 5,673 T1D) engaging in SMBG and without prior CGM use, including 3,806 who began rtCGM and 37,947 who did not | Change in HbA1c, hypoglycemia resulting in ED visit or hospital admission; hyperglycemia resulting in ED visit or hospital admission; HbA1c < 7%; HbA1c < 8%; HbA1c > 9%; ED visit for any reason; hospital admission for any reason; number of outpatient visits; number of telephone visits | rtCGM initiators experienced greater HbA1c reduction than noninitiators (mean difference − 0.40%, |
BGRI blood glucose risk index; BMI body mass index; BP blood pressure; CGM continuous glucose monitoring; CI confidence interval; CONGA continuous overall net glycemic action; CV coefficient of variation; DDS Diabetes Distress Scale; DTSQ Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire; ED emergency department; FPG fasting plasma glucose; GEM glycemic load, exercise, and monitoring glucose lifestyle modification program; GMI glucose management indicator; HABS Hypoglycemia Attitudes and Behavior Scale; HDL high density lipoprotein; isCGM intermittently scanned continuous glucose monitor; LADA latent autoimmune diabetes in adults; MAGE mean amplitude of glycemic excursion; MDI multiple daily injections; MODD mean of daily differences; PAID-5 Problem Areas in Diabetes 5-item short form; proCGM professional/blinded continuous glucose monitor; QoL quality of life; rCGM retrospective continuous glucose monitor; RCT randomized controlled trial; rtCGM real-time continuous glucose monitor; SD standard deviation; SMBG self-monitoring of blood glucose; T1D type 1 diabetes; T2D type 2 diabetes; TIR time in range; WHO World Health Organization
Gaps, considerations, and future directions for research
| Gap | Considerations | Future directions |
|---|---|---|
| Gap 1. CGM influence on healthcare workforce efficiency | Most limitations of CGM care will be within primary care practices, where the majority of patients with T2D are being managed. Having a workforce that understands what CGM is and how to interpret data is necessary to optimize CGM use. Clinic workflow must also consider how CGM data will be obtained (e.g., manual CGM download, download from a cloud-based system, or local viewing on patient’s device), reviewed, and documented. Access to diabetes care and education specialists (including but not limited to nurses, pharmacists, dietitians) may be important for ongoing evaluation of CGM data and may increase costs. Further, integration of data into the electronic medical record may create additional work (e.g., scanning printed reports or uploading electronic reports) | Research on the costs of implementation of CGM within PCP settings is needed to fully appreciate uptake, sustainability, and insurance coverage |
| Gap 2. CGM costs related to meeting quality indicators | As described above, one study [ | In the future, time in range (% of time between 70 and 180 mg/dL) may be an additional HEDIS measure that could be examined. HEDIS measures could also be expanded to include glucose management indicator, especially for patients in whom HbA1c is unreliable (hemoglobinopathies, pregnancy, etc.), which may decrease laboratory costs |
| Gap 3. Lack of data on healthcare utilization related to CGM use | While we did identify that CGM use was cost-effective for those with T2D not using prandial insulin [ | Future research should include longitudinal analysis to examine ongoing costs, even if there are initial cost increases, due to the possibility of downstream preventative effects, such as prevention of increasing HbA1c, diabetes distress levels, and complications, in addition to worsening quality of life |
Note: CGM continuous glucose monitoring, T2D type 2 diabetes, PCP primary care provider, HEDIS Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set