Comparison of a Multiple Daily Insulin Injection Regimen (Basal Once-Daily Glargine Plus Mealtime Lispro) and Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion (Lispro) in Type 1 Diabetes
A randomized open parallel multicenter study
- Geremia B. Bolli, MD1,
- David Kerr, MD2,
- Reena Thomas, MD3,
- Elisabetta Torlone, MD1,
- Agnès Sola-Gazagnes, MD4,
- Ester Vitacolonna, MD5,
- Jean Louis Selam, MD4 and
- Philip D. Home, DM, DPHIL3
- 1Department of Internal Medicine, University of Perugia, Perugia, Italy;
- 2Diabetes and Endocrinology Centre, Royal Bournemouth Hospital, Bournemouth, U.K.;
- 3Institute of Cellular Medicine-Diabetes, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, U.K.;
- 4Service de Diabétologie, Hôtel Dieu, APHP, Paris, France;
- 5Department of Medicine and Aging, University “G. d'Annunzio,” Chieti, Italy.
- Corresponding author: Geremia B. Bolli, gbolli{at}unipg.it.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE Insulin pump therapy (continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion [CSII]) and multiple daily injections (MDIs) with insulin glargine as basal insulin and mealtime insulin lispro have not been prospectively compared in people naïve to either regimen in a multicenter study. We aimed to help close that deficiency.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS People with type 1 diabetes on NPH-based insulin therapy were randomized to CSII or glargine-based MDI (both otherwise using lispro) and followed for 24 weeks in an equivalence design. Fifty people were correctly randomized, and 43 completed the study.
RESULTS Total insulin requirement (mean ± SD) at end point was 36.2 ± 11.5 units/day on CSII and 42.6 ± 15.5 units/day on MDI. Mean A1C fell similarly in the two groups (CSII −0.7 ± 0.7%; MDI −0.6 ± 0.8%) with a baseline-adjusted difference of −0.1% (95% CI −0.5 to 0.3). Similarly, fasting blood glucose and other preprandial, postprandial, and nighttime self-monitored plasma glucose levels did not differ between the regimens, nor did measures of plasma glucose variability. On CSII, 1,152 hypoglycemia events were recorded by 23 of 28 participants (82%) and 1,022 in the MDI group by 27 of 29 patients (93%) (all hypoglycemia differences were nonsignificant). Treatment satisfaction score increased more with CSII; however, the change in score was similar for the groups. Costs were ∼3.9 times higher for CSII.
CONCLUSIONS In unselected people with type 1 diabetes naïve to CSII or insulin glargine, glycemic control is no better with the more expensive CSII therapy compared with glargine-based MDI therapy.
Footnotes
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Clinical trial reg. no. NCT00540709, clinicaltrials.gov.
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
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- Received October 15, 2008.
- Accepted April 12, 2009.
- © 2009 by the American Diabetes Association.














