EASD 2022 | Freestyle Libre cuts acute complication risk in insulin-treated type 2 diabetes | diabetes.medicinematters.com Skip to main content
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20-09-2022 | EASD 2022 | Conference coverage | News

Freestyle Libre cuts acute complication risk in insulin-treated type 2 diabetes

Author: Eleanor McDermid

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medwireNews: People taking basal insulin to treat type 2 diabetes experience a significant reduction in the risk for acute complications, which is sustained for at least 2 years after initiating use of the Freestyle Libre, say French researchers.

The analysis from the RELIEF study included 5933 people with type 2 diabetes treated with basal-only insulin who initiated intermittently scanned continuous glucose monitoring (isCGM) with the Freestyle Libre. These people were identified in a nationwide database between August 2017 and December 2018.

During the year prior to isCGM initiation, the rate of hospitalization for any acute complications was 2.40% and in the year after this fell significantly to 0.79%.

This was true for diabetic ketoacidosis, which fell by 75% from 1.37% to 0.34%, for severe hypoglycemia, which fell by 44% from 0.73% to 0.41%, and for the rate of comas, which fell by 71% from 0.34% to 0.10%. Hospitalizations for hyperglycemia were extremely rare in the year before initiation, at 0.07%, and there were none in the year after.

These benefits were sustained in the 1994 people who continued to use isCGM for 2 years, with all hospitalizations for acute events falling from 2.00% to 0.75% at year 1 and 0.60% at year 2.

Researcher Jean-Pierre Riveline (Lariboisière Hospital, Paris, France) told delegates at the 58th EASD Annual Meeting in Stockholm, Sweden, that the benefits at year 1 were observed regardless of whether the Libre was prescribed in primary or specialist care and regardless of how much people self-monitored their blood glucose at baseline.

“This suggests that Freestyle Libre should be more widely prescribed as part of individualized care for patients with type 2 diabetes treated with a basal-only insulin regimen,” Riveline concluded.

medwireNews is an independent medical news service provided by Springer Healthcare Ltd. © 2022 Springer Healthcare Ltd, part of the Springer Nature Group

EASD Annual Meeting; Stockholm, Sweden: Sept 19–23, 2022

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