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Real-world outcomes of Omnipod DASH system use in people with type 1 diabetes: Evidence from the Association of British Clinical Diabetologists (ABCD) study

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posted on 2024-04-26, 15:19 authored by Alexandros L Liarakos, Nebras Hasan, Thomas SJ Crabtree, Lalantha Leelarathna, Peter Hammond, Sufyan Hussain, Masud Haq, Aisha Aslam, Erneda Gatdula, Fraser W Gibb, Alistair Lumb, Kirsty Bull, Eswari Chinnasamy, Giorgio Carrieri, David M Williams, Pratik Choudhary, Robert EJ Ryder, Emma G Wilmot

Aims

To evaluate real-world outcomes in people with Type 1 Diabetes (PwT1D) initiated on Omnipod DASH® Insulin Management System.

Methods

Anonymized clinical data were submitted to a secure web-based tool within the National Health Service network. Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), sensor-derived glucometrics, total daily dose of insulin (TDD), and patient-reported outcome changes between baseline and follow-up were assessed. Individuals were classified to "new-to-pump" (switched from multiple daily injections) and "established-on-pump" (switched from a tethered insulin pump) groups.

Results

276 individuals from 11 centers [66.7 % female; 92 % White British; median age 41 years (IQR 20-50); diabetes duration 20 years (IQR 11-31); 49.3 % within "new-to-pump" group] were included. Baseline HbA1c was 8.0 ± 1.3 % (64 ± 14 mmol/mol). At follow-up [3 years (IQR 1.5-3.2)], HbA1c reduced by 0.3 % [(3 mmol/mol); p = 0.002] across the total population, 0.4 % [(5 mmol/mol); p = 0.001] in those "new-to-pump" and remained unchanged in those "established-on-pump". TDD decreased in the "new-to-pump" cohort (baseline:44.9 ± 21.0units vs follow-up:38.1 ± 15.4units, p = 0.002). Of those asked, 141/143 (98.6 %) stated Omnipod DASH had a positive impact on quality of life.

Conclusions

Omnipod DASH was associated with improvements in HbA1c in PwT1D "new-to-pump" and maintained previous HbA1c levels in those "established-on-pump". User satisfaction in all groups and TDD reduction in those "new-to-pump" were reported.

Funding

The ABCD Omnipod audit is an independent audit supported by an unrestricted grant from Insulet Corporation.

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences/Population Health Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Diabetes Research and Clinical Practice

Volume

209

Pagination

111597

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

0168-8227

eissn

1872-8227

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-04-26

Spatial coverage

Ireland

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Pratik Choudhary

Deposit date

2024-04-25

Rights Retention Statement

  • No

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