Purpose
Real-time continuous glucose monitoring (RT-CGM) provides information on glycaemic variability (GV), time in range (TIR) and guidance to avoid hypoglycemia, thereby complimenting HbA1c for diabetes management. We investigated whether GV and TIR were independently associated with chronic and acute diabetes complications.
Methods
Between September 2014 and January 2017 515 subjects with type 1 diabetes using sensor-augmented pump therapy were followed for 24 months. The link between baseline HbA1c and CGM-derived glucometrics (TIR [70-180 mg/dL], coefficient of variation [CV] and standard deviation [SD]) obtained from the first 2 weeks of RT-CGM use and the presence of complications was investigated. Complications were defined as: composite microvascular complications (presence of neuropathy, retinopathy or nephropathy), macrovascular complications, and hospitalization for hypoglycemia and/or ketoacidosis.
Results
Individuals with microvascular complications were older (P<0.001), had a longer diabetes duration (P<0.001), a higher HbA1c (7.8±0.9 vs 7.5±0.9%, P<0.001) and spent less time in range (60.4±12.2 vs 63.9±13.8%, P=0.022) compared to those without microvascular complication. Diabetes duration (OR=1.12 [1.09-1.15],P<0.001) and TIR (OR=0.97 [0.95-0.99], P=0.005) were independent risk factors for composite microvascular complications, while SD and CV were not. Age (OR=1.08 [1.03-1.14],P=0.003) and HbA1c (OR=1.80 [1.02-3.14], P=0.044) were risk factors for macrovascular complications. TIR (OR=0.97 [0.95-0.99], P=0.021) was the only independent risk factor for hospitalizations for hypoglycaemia or ketoacidosis.
Conclusions
Lower TIR was associated with the presence of composite microvascular complications and with hospitalization for hypoglycemia or ketoacidosis. TIR, SD and CV were not associated with macrovascular complications.
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