Use of the FreeStyle Libre system and diabetes treatment progression in T2DM: Results from a retrospective cohort study using a Canadian private payer claims database

Author:

Harris Stewart B.1,Levrat‐Guillen Fleur2

Affiliation:

1. Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry Western University London Ontario Canada

2. Abbott Laboratories Ltd Berkshire UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundUp to one‐third of Canadians are estimated to be living with prediabetes or diabetes. A retrospective study using Canadian private drug claims data was conducted to investigate whether flash glucose monitoring using the FreeStyle Libre system (FSL) among people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in Canada can be associated with changes in treatment intensification when compared with blood glucose monitoring (BGM) alone.Materials and MethodsUsing a Canadian national private drug claims database comprising approximately 50% coverage of insured individuals in Canada, cohorts of people with T2DM using FSL or BGM were identified algorithmically based on treatment history and followed over a 24‐month study period, tracking their progression in diabetes treatment therapy. The Andersen‐Gill model for recurrent time‐to‐event data was used to evaluate whether the rate of treatment progression differs between the FSL and BGM treatment cohorts. The survival function was used to calculate comparative treatment progression probabilities between the cohorts.ResultsIn total, 373 871 people with T2DM met the inclusion criteria. Across treatment (FSL) and control (BGM) groups, people using FSL had a higher probability of treatment progression compared with BGM alone, with a relative risk ranging between 1.86 and 2.81 (p < .001). A higher probability of treatment progression was independent of the diabetes treatment at the enrolment date (index date) or the patient status, and independent of whether patients were treatment naïve or on established diabetes therapy. Assessment of the ending treatment relative to the starting therapy indicated that dynamic treatment changes were most evident for patients in the FSL cohort and that the FSL cohort had a much greater portion of patients who ended with insulin treatment (when they started with non‐insulin treatment) compared with the BGM cohort.ConclusionsPeople with T2DM using FSL had a greater probability for treatment progression compared with BGM alone, irrespective of the starting therapy, which may suggest that FSL can be used to support escalation of diabetes therapy to improve therapeutic inertia in T2DM.

Funder

Abbott Diabetes Care

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference34 articles.

1. PowderlyK.One in Three Canadians Is Living with Diabetes or Prediabetes Yet Knowledge of Risk and Complications of Disease Remains Low.2019Available from:https://www.diabetes.ca/media-room/press-releases/one-in-three-canadians-is-living-with-diabetes-or-prediabetes -yet-knowledge-of-risk-and-complicatio#_ftnref1

2. Therapeutic inertia in type 2 diabetes: prevalence, causes, consequences and methods to overcome inertia

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