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Exploring Patient Preferences for Adjunct-to-Insulin Therapy in Type 1 Diabetes.

Citation
Perkins, B. A., et al. “Exploring Patient Preferences For Adjunct-To-Insulin Therapy In Type 1 Diabetes.”. Diabetes Care, pp. 1716-1723.
Center Joslin Diabetes Center
Author Bruce A Perkins, Julio Rosenstock, Jay S Skyler, Lori M Laffel, David Z Cherney, Chantal Mathieu, Christianne Pang, Richard Wood, Ona Kinduryte, Jyothis T George, Jan Marquard, Nima Soleymanlou
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: While sodium-glucose cotransporter inhibitor (SGLTi) therapy has been evaluated in type 1 diabetes (T1D) trials, patient reactions to benefits and risks are unknown. Using established methodology, we evaluated patient preferences for different adjunct-to-insulin therapy options in T1D.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: An online survey, completed by 701 respondents with T1D (231 U.S., 242 Canada, and 228 Germany), used conjoint analysis to present six hypothetical, masked, pairwise drug profile choices composed of different benefit-risk attributes and effect ranges. Data used in analyses were derived from actual phase 3 trials of a low-dose SGLTi (comparable to oral empagliflozin 2.5 mg q.d.), a high-dose SGLTi (comparable to oral sotagliflozin 400 mg q.d.), and an available adjunct-to-insulin therapy (comparable to subcutaneous pramlintide 60 μg t.i.d.).

RESULTS: Conjoint analysis identified diabetic ketoacidosis risk as most important to patients (23% relative score; test, < 0.05); ranked second were HbA reduction (14%), risk of severe hypoglycemia (13%), oral versus injectable treatment (12%), and risk of genital infection (12%). Next was risk of nausea (11%), followed by weight reduction (8%) and the risk of diarrhea (7%). A low-dose SGLTi drug profile was identified by conjoint analysis as the top patient preference (83% of participants; test, < 0.05) versus high-dose SGLTi (8%) or pramlintide (9%). Separate from conjoint analysis, when respondents were asked to choose their preferred adjunct-to-insulin therapy (masked to drug name/dose), 69%, 17%, 6%, and 9% of respondents chose low-dose SGLTi, high-dose SGLTi, pramlintide, and insulin therapy alone, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: Low-dose SGLTi profile was the favored adjunct-to-insulin therapy by persons with T1D.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Diabetes care
Volume
42
Issue
9
Number of Pages
1716-1723
Date Published
12/2019
ISSN Number
1935-5548
DOI
10.2337/dc19-0548
Alternate Journal
Diabetes Care
PMID
31177179
PMCID
PMC6973543
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