Treatment Satisfaction and Well-Being With CGM in People With T1D: An Analysis Based on the GOLD Randomized Trial
Journal article, 2023

Background: The GOLD trial demonstrated that continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) managed with multiple daily insulin injections (MDI) improved not only glucose control but also overall well-being and treatment satisfaction. This analysis investigated which factors contributed to improved well-being and treatment satisfaction with CGM. Methods: The GOLD trial was a randomized crossover trial comparing CGM versus self-monitored blood glucose (SMBG) over 16 months. Endpoints included well-being measured by the World Health Organization–Five Well-Being Index (WHO-5) and treatment satisfaction by the Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (DTSQ) as well as glucose metrics. Multivariable R2-decomposition was used to understand which variables contributed most to treatment satisfaction. Results: A total of 139 participants were included. Multivariable analyses revealed that increased convenience and flexibility contributed to 60% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 50%-69%) of the improvement in treatment satisfaction (Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire change version [DTSQc]) observed with CGM, whereas perceived effects on hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia only contributed to 6% (95% CI = 2%-11%) of improvements. Significant improvements in well-being (WHO-5) by CGM were observed for the following: feeling cheerful (P =.025), calm and relaxed (P =.024), being active (P =.046), and waking up fresh and rested (P =.044). HbA1c reductions and increased time in range (TIR) were associated with increased treatment satisfaction, whereas glycemic variability was not. HbA1c reduction showed also an association with increased well-being and increased TIR with less diabetes-related distress. Conclusions: While CGM improves glucose control in people with T1D on MDI, increased convenience and flexibility through CGM is of even greater importance for treatment satisfaction and patient well-being. These CGM-mediated effects should be taken into account when considering CGM initiation.

SMBG

type 1 diabetes

CGMS

treatment satisfaction

MDI

quality of life

Author

Daniel Pylov

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

William Polonsky

University of California

Behavioral Diabetes Institute

Henrik Imberg

Statistiska Konsultgruppen

Chalmers, Mathematical Sciences, Applied Mathematics and Statistics

University of Gothenburg

Helen Holmer

Kristianstad Central Hospital

Jarl Hellman

Uppsala University

Magnus O. Wijkman

Linköping University

Jan Bolinder

Karolinska University Hospital

Tim Heisse

Profil

S. Dahlqvist

NU Hospital Group

Thomas Nyström

Karolinska Institutet

Erik Schwarz

Faculty of Medicine and Health

Irl B. Hirsch

School of Medicine

Marcus Lind

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

NU Hospital Group

University of Gothenburg

Journal of diabetes science and technology

19322968 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories

Endocrinology and Diabetes

DOI

10.1177/19322968231183974

PubMed

37501366

More information

Latest update

8/9/2023 1