1型糖尿病血糖持续监测:健康技术评估

Q1 Medicine Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Pub Date : 2018-02-21 eCollection Date: 2018-01-01
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:1型糖尿病是胰腺分泌很少或不分泌胰岛素的一种疾病。1型糖尿病患者必须通过监测血液中的葡萄糖量来控制血糖水平,并通过注射或胰岛素泵给予适量的胰岛素。与使用血糖仪自我监测血糖相比,连续血糖监测可能是有益的。它提供了对一个人的血糖水平的持续了解,并可以确定血糖水平是上升还是下降。方法:我们进行了一项健康技术评估,包括对持续血糖监测的临床效益、物有所值和患者偏好的评估。我们比较了连续血糖监测与使用手指刺破和血糖仪的自我血糖监测。我们对2010年1月1日以来发表的研究进行了系统的文献检索。我们创建了一个预测成人1型糖尿病患者生命周期的马尔可夫模型,并从医疗保健支付者的角度进行了预算影响分析。我们还与自我管理1型糖尿病或支持管理1型糖尿病儿童的人进行了访谈和焦点小组讨论。结果:20项研究被纳入临床证据回顾。与自我血糖监测相比,持续血糖监测使患者在目标血糖范围内停留的时间百分比提高了9.6%(95%置信区间8.0-11.2)至10.0%(95%置信区间6.75-13.25),并减少了严重低血糖事件的发生次数。持续血糖监测与较高的成本和健康益处(质量调整生命年)的小幅增加有关。在比较四种连续血糖监测干预与常规护理的分析中,每个质量调整生命年获得的增量成本效益比(ICERs)从592,206美元到1,108,812美元不等。然而,ICERs的不确定性很大。假设持续血糖监测的采用每年增加20%,公共资助持续血糖监测的净预算影响将从第一年的850万美元到第五年的1620万美元不等。患者对持续血糖监测的关注程度很高。患者认为这些设备在治疗1型糖尿病,特别是儿童糖尿病方面提供了重要的社交、情感、医疗和安全益处。结论:在治疗1型糖尿病时,持续血糖监测比自我血糖监测更有效,例如在目标血糖范围内的时间和在目标血糖范围外的时间(本证据具有中等确定性)。我们不太确定持续血糖监测是否会减少严重低血糖事件的发生。与自我血糖监测相比,持续血糖监测的成本更高,健康益处仅略有增加。为安大略省1型糖尿病患者提供持续血糖监测的公共资金将导致未来5年卫生系统的额外费用。成年患者和1型糖尿病儿童的父母报告了持续血糖监测的积极体验。持续血糖监测设备的高持续成本被视为其广泛使用的最大障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Continuous Monitoring of Glucose for Type 1 Diabetes: A Health Technology Assessment.

Background: Type 1 diabetes is a condition in which the pancreas produces little or no insulin. People with type 1 diabetes must manage their blood glucose levels by monitoring the amount of glucose in their blood and administering appropriate amounts of insulin via injection or an insulin pump. Continuous glucose monitoring may be beneficial compared to self-monitoring of blood glucose using a blood glucose meter. It provides insight into a person's blood glucose levels on a continuous basis, and can identify whether blood glucose levels are trending up or down.

Methods: We conducted a health technology assessment, which included an evaluation of clinical benefit, value for money, and patient preferences related to continuous glucose monitoring. We compared continuous glucose monitoring with self-monitoring of blood glucose using a finger-prick and a blood glucose meter. We performed a systematic literature search for studies published since January 1, 2010. We created a Markov model projecting the lifetime horizon of adults with type 1 diabetes, and performed a budget impact analysis from the perspective of the health care payer. We also conducted interviews and focus group discussions with people who self-manage their type 1 diabetes or support the management of a child with type 1 diabetes.

Results: Twenty studies were included in the clinical evidence review. Compared with self-monitoring of blood glucose, continuous glucose monitoring improved the percentage of time patients spent in the target glycemic range by 9.6% (95% confidence interval 8.0-11.2) to 10.0% (95% confidence interval 6.75-13.25) and decreased the number of severe hypoglycemic events.Continuous glucose monitoring was associated with higher costs and small increases in health benefits (quality-adjusted life-years). Incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) ranged from $592,206 to $1,108,812 per quality-adjusted life-year gained in analyses comparing four continuous glucose monitoring interventions to usual care. However, the uncertainty around the ICERs was large. The net budget impact of publicly funding continuous glucose monitoring assuming a 20% annual increase in adoption of continuous glucose monitoring would range from $8.5 million in year 1 to $16.2 million in year 5.Patient engagement surrounding the topic of continuous glucose monitoring was robust. Patients perceived that these devices provided important social, emotional, and medical and safety benefits in managing type 1 diabetes, especially in children.

Conclusions: Continuous glucose monitoring was more effective than self-monitoring of blood glucose in managing type 1 diabetes for some outcomes, such as time spent in the target glucose range and time spent outside the target glucose range (moderate certainty in this evidence). We were less certain that continuous glucose monitoring would reduce the number of severe hypoglycemic events. Compared with self-monitoring of blood glucose, the costs of continuous glucose monitoring were higher, with only small increases in health benefits. Publicly funding continuous glucose monitoring for the type 1 diabetes population in Ontario would result in additional costs to the health system over the next 5 years. Adult patients and parents of children with type 1 diabetes reported very positive experiences with continuous glucose monitoring. The high ongoing cost of continuous glucose monitoring devices was seen as the greatest barrier to their widespread use.

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来源期刊
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series
Ontario Health Technology Assessment Series Medicine-Medicine (miscellaneous)
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4.60
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