As life expectancy becomes longer in Japan, there has been an increase of elderly patients with type 2 diabetes who need insulin therapy but cannot perform self-injection due to dementia or other conditions. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the efficacy and safety of thrice-weekly insulin degludec therapy in elderly patients with poorly controlled diabetes. The subjects were 22 hospitalized elderly Japanese patients with type 2 diabetes who had difficulty with self-injection. After becoming stable on once-daily insulin degludec treatment, they were assigned to continue once-daily injection (OD group) or were switched to thrice-weekly injection (TW group) for one week. In the TW group, insulin degludec (IDeg) was injected at twice the OD dose before lunch on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. Glycemic control was assessed by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) over 7 days. The mean 7-day glucose level (131±25 mg/dL with OD vs. 152±30 mg/dL with TW, p=0.11) and the mean 7-day standard deviation (32±10 mg/dL with OD vs. 36±14 mg/dL with TW, p=0.45) did not differ significantly between the two groups. The percent duration of glucose <70 mg/dL (2.4±3.1% with OD vs. 1.3±2.5% with TW, p=0.39) and glucose >200 mg/dL (7.2±12.1% with OD vs. 15.6±18.0% with TW, p=0.22) over 7 days also showed no significant differences between the two groups. In conclusion, thrice-weekly IDeg provided by a visiting nurse could be a practical option for elderly diabetic patients who have difficulty performing self-injection of insulin.
CITATION STYLE
Nagai, Y., Murakami, M., Igarashi, K., Nakamura, Y., Tsukiyama, H., Matsubara, F., … Tanaka, Y. (2016). Efficacy and safety of thrice-weekly insulin degludec in elderly patients with type 2 diabetes assessed by continuous glucose monitoring. Endocrine Journal, 63(12), 1099–1106. https://doi.org/10.1507/endocrj.EJ16-0252
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.