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Clinical insights from continuous glucose monitor use in patients living with type 1 diabetes in rural Malawi


G. Ferrari
M. Boti
D. Nakotwa
A. Gomber
M.M. Coates
K. Kumwenda
F Valeta
L. Drown
A. Thapa
V. Mithi
A. Msekandiana
C. Kachimanga
P.H. Park
A.J. Adler
G. Bukhman
T. Ruderman
C. Trujillo

Abstract

Background: People living with type 1 diabetes (PLWT1D) in low-resource settings face numerous barriers to achieving glycaemic  targets. Use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) is increasing but uptake remains low in sub-Saharan Africa. In 2022, a randomised  controlled trial (RCT) evaluating feasibility of CGM was conducted in Neno, Malawi. This is a retrospective sub-study examining three- month blood glucose trends from participants randomised to the CGM arm. 


Methods: This is a sub-study of a 2:1 parallel arm open  randomised controlled trial to assess the feasibility and impact of CGM. Ambulatory glucose profiles (AGP) from 29 participants in the  CGM arm were reviewed by clinicians. Two patient reports with AGP patterns exemplifying observed trends were identified and described  in detail, and interventions were highlighted. 


Results: Time below optimal blood glucose range was highest from 12 am to 6  am: 7.0%, 6.9%, and 5.1% for months one, two, and three respectively. From baseline to endline, the average absolute value (increase or  decrease) of the percentage change in total daily dose (TDD) of insulin was 11.2%. Case studies of two patients who demonstrated a  positive impact of CGM are reported. 


Conclusions: CGM provided compelling insights into blood glucose trends with significant clinical  implications, specifically high prevalence of overnight hypoglycaemia. The ability to monitor blood glucose levels is critical because high  variability and severe hypoglycaemia increase the risk of morbidity and mortality. CGM is a tool that can enhance patient education and  the ability to guide treatment decisions for patients and clinicians in low-resource settings.    


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2220-1009
print ISSN: 1608-9677