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Improved metabolic control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes: a trend analysis using prospective multicenter data from Germany and Austria
Authors:Rosenbauer Joachim  Dost Axel  Karges Beate  Hungele Andreas  Stahl Anna  Bächle Christina  Gerstl Eva Maria  Kastendieck Christian  Hofer Sabine E  Holl Reinhard W;DPV Initiative and the German BMBF Competence Network Diabetes Mellitus
Institution:Institute of Biometrics and Epidemiology, German Diabetes Center, Leibniz Center at University of Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany. joachim.rosenbauer@ddz.uni-duesseldorf.de
Abstract:

OBJECTIVE

To investigate the temporal trend of metabolic control and potential predictors in German and Austrian children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

This study is based on a large, multicenter database for prospective longitudinal documentation of diabetes care in Germany and Austria. Data from 30,708 patients documented in 305 diabetes centers between 1995 and 2009 were analyzed. Generalized linear mixed regression models were used to adjust trend analysis for relevant confounders.

RESULTS

Unadjusted mean HbA1c decreased from 8.7 ± 1.8% in 1995 to 8.1 ± 1.5% in 2009. In multiple regression analysis, treatment year, age, sex, diabetes duration, migration background, BMI-SDS, and daily insulin dose were significant predictors of metabolic control (P < 0.001). After multiple adjustment, mean HbA1c decreased significantly by 0.038% per year (95% CI 0.032–0.043%), average odds ratio (OR) per year for HbA1c >7.5% (>9.0%) was 0.969 (95% CI 0.961–0.977) (0.948, 95% CI 0.941–0.956). Intensified insulin regimen was associated with lower frequency of poor metabolic control (HbA1c >9%; P = 0.005) but not with average HbA1c (P = 0.797). Rate of severe hypoglycemia and hypoglycemic coma decreased significantly (relative risk RR] per year 0.948, 95% CI 0.918–0.979; RR 0.917, 95% CI 0.885–0.950) over the study period. Diabetic ketoacidosis rate showed no significant variation over time.

CONCLUSIONS

This study showed a significant improvement in metabolic control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes during the past decade and a simultaneous decrease in hypoglycemic events. The improvement was not completely explained by changes in the mode of insulin treatment. Other factors such as improved patient education may have accounted for the observed trend.The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT) showed that improved metabolic control reduces the risk of long-term complications in both adult and adolescent patients with type 1 diabetes (1,2). The observational follow-up study of the DCCT (the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications EDIC] study) further proved that good glycemic control had persistent beneficial effects on long-term complications (3). Based on the results of the DCCT/EDIC study, it was recommended to optimize glycemic control as early and close to normal as possible in all patients with type 1 diabetes in order to prevent development and progression of microvascular complications.Diabetes treatment has been intensified in pediatric and adolescent patients during the past 15 years. Insulin therapy has changed from twice-daily injection regimen to intensified therapy with multiple daily injections (MDI) and continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). This has been reported from single-center and multicenter studies (410). In the 1990s, mainly an increased use of MDI was observed, whereas since 2000, pump therapy increased considerably, paralleled by a decrease in MDI therapy (11). With the intensification of insulin regimen, the frequency of daily self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG) increased continuously (5,1012), as close glucose monitoring is a precondition for intensified insulin therapy with an appropriate dose adjustment. Likewise, the use of short-acting insulin analogs has continuously increased since the mid-1990s and the use of long-acting analogs since 2000 (4,5,10).Despite these far-ranging changes in diabetes therapy, the anticipated improvement in metabolic control in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes has not been achieved in all settings. The multicenter Hvidoere studies did not observe any improvement in glycemic control during 1995–2005 (68). Other studies, however, reported a significant decrease in average HbA1c level over the past two decades (4,5,10,11,13). Concordantly, several studies indicated a notable increase in the proportion of children and adolescents with good metabolic control (HbA1c <7.5 or <8%) over the past years (11,13).In the DCCT study, the tradeoff with intensified insulin therapy was a marked increase in episodes of severe hypoglycemia (2). Several studies reported a higher hypoglycemia risk with lower HbA1c level (4,6,7,10,14), but others did not (15,16). Results on the trend of severe hypoglycemic events over the past 15 years are also inconsistent (4,5,8,9,11).The aim of this study was to give a current update on the temporal trend of metabolic control in German and Austrian children and adolescents over the past 15 years (1995–2009), to identify potential determinants of metabolic control, and to analyze the simultaneous trend of severe hypoglycemic and diabetic ketoacidotic events.
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