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  • Title: Indications for insulin pump therapy in different age groups: an analysis of 1,567 children and adolescents.
    Author: Kapellen TM, Heidtmann B, Bachmann J, Ziegler R, Grabert M, Holl RW.
    Journal: Diabet Med; 2007 Aug; 24(8):836-42. PubMed ID: 17650157.
    Abstract:
    AIMS: The German working group for pump therapy in paediatric patients has defined seven indications for continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII): dawn phenomenon, reduction of severe hypoglycaemia, improvement of hyperglycaemia, more flexibility, motivation, failure of injection therapy and pregnancy. In this study we analysed age-specific differences for starting CSII in four age groups (group A: 0-4 years; group B: 5-9 years; group C: 10-14 years; group D: 15-19 years). We also investigated whether glycaemic goals could be reached. METHODS: A total of 1567 children and adolescents (mean age 12.4 years, mean diabetes duration 5.2 years) with documented indications for CSII from the DPV-database (December 2005) were included. RESULTS: Dawn phenomenon (27.4%), reduction of hypoglycaemia (20%) and improvement of hyperglycaemia (18.1%) were the commonest indications for starting CSII. Indications differed by age group (P < 0.0001). In infants and toddlers (group A, n = 138) reduction of hypoglycaemia (42.5%) was the commonest indication. For adolescents (group C, n = 789/group D, n = 408) dawn phenomenon (32.1/21.7%) and flexibility (21.7/25.8%) were the main indications. The rate of severe hypoglycaemia with coma in patients commencing CSII in order to reduce hypoglycaemia fell (12.1/100 patient years before CSII vs. 5.8 after 1 year, 4.49 at study end). Glycated haemoglobin (HbA(1c)) in patients with the treatment goal 'improvement of hyperglycaemia' was lowered significantly in the first year of CSII (HbA(1c) start: 8.8%; after 1 year: 8.5%, P < 0.01) and was stable thereafter (8.8% after 36 months). CONCLUSIONS: CSII in children and adolescents is safe and can reduce the rate of severe hypoglycaemia without deterioration in glycaemic control. In patients with poor glucose control, a significant reduction in HbA(1c) can be achieved in the first year.
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