连续血糖监测
临床试验
心理干预
糖尿病
梅德林
临床终点
重症监护医学
随机对照试验
无症状的
前瞻性队列研究
医学
政治学
内科学
法学
精神科
内分泌学
血糖性
作者
Tadej Battelino,Charles M. Alexander,Stephanie A. Amiel,Guillermo Arreaza-Rubín,Peter Calhoun,Richard M. Bergenstal,Bruce A. Buckingham,James Carroll,Antonio Ceriello,Elaine Chow,Pratik Choudhary,Kelly L. Close,Thomas Danne,Sanjoy Dutta,Robert A. Gabbay,Satish K. Garg,Julie Heverly,Irl B. Hirsch,Tina Kader,Julia Kenney,Boris Kovatchev,Lori M. Laffel,David M. Maahs,Chantal Mathieu,Dı́dac Mauricio,Revital Nimri,Rimei Nishimura,Mauro Scharf,Stefano Del Prato,Éric Renard,Julio Rosenstock,Banshi Saboo,Kohjiro Ueki,Guillermo E Umpierrez,Stuart A. Weinzimer,Moshe Phillip
标识
DOI:10.1016/s2213-8587(22)00319-9
摘要
Randomised controlled trials and other prospective clinical studies for novel medical interventions in people with diabetes have traditionally reported HbA1c as the measure of average blood glucose levels for the 3 months preceding the HbA1c test date. The use of this measure highlights the long-established correlation between HbA1c and relative risk of diabetes complications; the change in the measure, before and after the therapeutic intervention, is used by regulators for the approval of medications for diabetes. However, with the increasing use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in clinical practice, prospective clinical studies are also increasingly using CGM devices to collect data and evaluate glucose profiles among study participants, complementing HbA1c findings, and further assess the effects of therapeutic interventions on HbA1c. Data is collected by CGM devices at 1–5 min intervals, which obtains data on glycaemic excursions and periods of asymptomatic hypoglycaemia or hyperglycaemia (ie, details of glycaemic control that are not provided by HbA1c concentrations alone that are measured continuously and can be analysed in daily, weekly, or monthly timeframes). These CGM-derived metrics are the subject of standardised, internationally agreed reporting formats and should, therefore, be considered for use in all clinical studies in diabetes. The purpose of this consensus statement is to recommend the ways CGM data might be used in prospective clinical studies, either as a specified study endpoint or as supportive complementary glucose metrics, to provide clinical information that can be considered by investigators, regulators, companies, clinicians, and individuals with diabetes who are stakeholders in trial outcomes. In this consensus statement, we provide recommendations on how to optimise CGM-derived glucose data collection in clinical studies, including the specific glucose metrics and specific glucose metrics that should be evaluated. These recommendations have been endorsed by the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists, the American Diabetes Association, the Association of Diabetes Care and Education Specialists, DiabetesIndia, the European Association for the Study of Diabetes, the International Society for Pediatric and Adolescent Diabetes, the Japanese Diabetes Society, and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. A standardised approach to CGM data collection and reporting in clinical trials will encourage the use of these metrics and enhance the interpretability of CGM data, which could provide useful information other than HbA1c for informing therapeutic and treatment decisions, particularly related to hypoglycaemia, postprandial hyperglycaemia, and glucose variability.