An Evaluation of the Safety of Pilots With Insulin-Treated Diabetes in Europe Flying Commercial and Noncommercial Aircraft

Author:

Garden Gillian L.1,Hine Julia L.1,Mitchell Stuart J.2,Hutchison Ewan J.2,Gaffney Thomas P.3,Hofmann Veronika4,Frier Brian M.5,Shaw Kenneth M.6,Heller Simon R.7ORCID,Koehler Gerd48,Roberts Graham A.3910,Russell-Jones David L.12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Surrey, Guildford, U.K.

2. Civil Aviation Authority, Crawley, West Sussex, U.K.

3. Irish Aviation Authority, Dublin, Ireland

4. Austro Control, Vienna, Austria

5. The Queen’s Medical Research Institute, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, U.K.

6. University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth, U.K.

7. Department of Oncology and Metabolism, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield, U.K.

8. Division of Endocrinology and Diabetology, Medical University Graz, Graz, Austria

9. CRF-C University College Cork, HRB Clinical Research Facility Cork, Mercy University Hospital, Cork, Ireland

10. Diabetes Research Group, Swansea University, Swansea, U.K.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE The risk of hypoglycemia in people with insulin-treated diabetes has debarred them from certain “safety-critical” occupations, including flying commercial aircraft. This report evaluates the effectiveness of a protocol enabling a large cohort of insulin-treated pilots to fly commercially. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS This was an observational study of pilots with insulin-treated diabetes who were granted medical certification to fly commercial and noncommercial aircraft. Clinical details, pre- and in-flight (hourly and 30 min before landing) blood glucose values were correlated against the protocol-specified ranges: green (5–15 mmol/L), amber (low, 4–4.9 mmol/L; high, 15.1–20 mmol/L), and red (low, <4 mmol/L; high, >20 mmol/L). RESULTS A total of 49 pilots with type 1 (84%) or type 2 (16%) diabetes who had been issued class 1 or class 2 certificates were studied. Median diabetes duration was 10.9 years. Mean HbA1c was 7.2% (55.0 mmol/mol) before certification and 7.2% (55.1 mmol/mol) after certification (P = 0.97). Blood glucose values (n = 38,621) were recorded during 22,078 flying hours. Overall, 97.69% of measurements were within the green range, 1.42% within the low amber range, and 0.75% within the high amber range. Only 0.12% of readings were within the low red range and 0.02% within the high red range. Out-of-range readings declined from 5.7% in 2013 to 1.2% in 2019. No episodes of pilot incapacitation occurred, and glycemic control did not deteriorate. CONCLUSIONS The protocol is practical to implement, and no events compromising safety were reported. This study represents what is, to our knowledge, the most extensive data set from people with insulin-treated diabetes working in a “safety-critical” occupation, which may be relevant when estimating risk in other safety-critical occupations.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference19 articles.

1. Fighting discrimination;Wientjens;Diabetes Res Clin Pract,2012

2. Would you fly with a pilot on insulin;Simons,2014

3. The U.S. experience with waivers for insulin-treated pilots;Mills;Aerosp Med Hum Perform,2017

4. Discrimination on high: flying on insulin;Steele;Diabetes Soc,2003

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