The challenge of assessing impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia in diabetes in the era of continuous glucose monitoring: A narrative review of evidence and translation into clinical practice.
Simon A Berry, Alexandros L Liarakos, Vaios Koutroukas, Pratik Choudhary, Emma G Wilmot, Ahmed Iqbal
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Abstract
Iatrogenic hypoglycaemia remains a major barrier in diabetes care. Over time, and with repeated hypoglycaemic episodes, the physiological responses to hypoglycaemia can become blunted, resulting in impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia (IAH). In IAH, the onset of cognitive dysfunction precedes the onset of autonomic symptoms, often preventing appropriate self-treatment, thus increasing the frequency of severe hypoglycaemia (SH). Historically, IAH has been assessed with questionnaires, such as the Gold and Clarke scores, which were developed in the 1990s. A stepwise change in diabetes management in the last few decades has been the deployment of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). CGM allows people with diabetes to set alarms that can warn them of hypoglycaemia or even impending hypoglycaemia, thus providing a degree of 'technological' awareness. This creates a challenge in assessing awareness status, as people may be alerted to low-sensor glucose events before they experience any symptoms. CGM also allows the introduction of new measures of hypoglycaemia exposure such as time below range, which might complement traditional methods of risk assessment. These changes in the field prompt a need for reassessment of the measures of IAH. This narrative review evaluates the current epidemiology of SH and IAH, explores different measures of IAH, and evaluates the relationship between CGM metrics, IAH and SH. We conclude that a clinical approach involving traditional questionnaires, or newer updated alternatives such as the Hypo A-Q awareness scale, combined with CGM metrics and clinical assessment of human factors is recommended in the absence of a clearly superior measure.
期刊介绍:
Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism is primarily a journal of clinical and experimental pharmacology and therapeutics covering the interrelated areas of diabetes, obesity and metabolism. The journal prioritises high-quality original research that reports on the effects of new or existing therapies, including dietary, exercise and lifestyle (non-pharmacological) interventions, in any aspect of metabolic and endocrine disease, either in humans or animal and cellular systems. ‘Metabolism’ may relate to lipids, bone and drug metabolism, or broader aspects of endocrine dysfunction. Preclinical pharmacology, pharmacokinetic studies, meta-analyses and those addressing drug safety and tolerability are also highly suitable for publication in this journal. Original research may be published as a main paper or as a research letter.