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SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks

Introduction: Patients and their families and medical providers have assumed that psychologic stress impacts glucose control in T1D (Type 1 Diabetes) though studies providing confirmatory evidence in real world settings are, to our knowledge, lacking. We hypothesized that self-reported psychologic s...

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Autores principales: Kaur, Ravinder Jeet, Pinsker, Jordan E, Dadlani, Vikash, Thapa, Prabin, Batthula, Sreedhar, Church, Mei Mei, Reid, Corey, Spitzer, Shelly McCrady, Kremers, Walter K, Dassau, Eyal, Kudva, Yogish C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207325/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1879
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author Kaur, Ravinder Jeet
Pinsker, Jordan E
Dadlani, Vikash
Thapa, Prabin
Batthula, Sreedhar
Church, Mei Mei
Reid, Corey
Spitzer, Shelly McCrady
Kremers, Walter K
Dassau, Eyal
Kudva, Yogish C
author_facet Kaur, Ravinder Jeet
Pinsker, Jordan E
Dadlani, Vikash
Thapa, Prabin
Batthula, Sreedhar
Church, Mei Mei
Reid, Corey
Spitzer, Shelly McCrady
Kremers, Walter K
Dassau, Eyal
Kudva, Yogish C
author_sort Kaur, Ravinder Jeet
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Patients and their families and medical providers have assumed that psychologic stress impacts glucose control in T1D (Type 1 Diabetes) though studies providing confirmatory evidence in real world settings are, to our knowledge, lacking. We hypothesized that self-reported psychologic stress worsens glucose control in T1D. Method: We studied 20 adults with T1D on continuous glucose monitor (CGM), sensor augmented insulin pump (SAP) prospectively at 2 clinical research centers. Patients reported psychological stress through stress diaries for 5 weeks on a severity scale of 1-7 using hard copy logs including time of onset and offset of stress and severity. For analytic purpose, grades 1-4 are classified as mild and grades 5-7 as severe. Results: Baseline characteristics were age 44.9±15.0 years, F/M 12/8, HbA1c 6.8 ± 0.7%, and diabetes duration of 22.9±15.9 years. We analyzed glucose variability during days of stress versus days without stress. During a 24 hour period, patients experienced less hypoglycemia during days with stress versus days without stress (p value 0.03). During the 5 week period, patients reported 23 ± 19.5 events. We analyzed the impact of self-reported stress on CGM data streams after excluding stress events associated with missing CGM data, nocturnal events (from 12 MN to 6 AM, too few events) and events for which subjects did not provide duration of stress. Thus, we analyzed 19.5 ± 17 events per patient from 6AM to 12MN. From 6 AM to 12 MN, the episodes lasted 179 ± 255 minutes with 83 % episodes being mild/moderate and 17% moderate/ severe. Number of CGM readings during daytime stress episodes were 717± 1120 compared to 8768± 1238 during non-stress periods. Impact of stress from 6 AM to 12 MN (Mid-Night) on CGM glucose was analyzed using matched paired t test. Mean glucose (160.6±41.9 vs 148.3± 28.6) and SD (53.2 ±17.7 vs 56.1±14.6) did not show a difference; however % of time spent below 70 mg/dl was less (4 ± 5) in patients during stressful periods compared to times without stress (6.3± 5.5, P value 0.02). Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first study attempting to analyze the impact of self-reported stress using daily stress diaries on CGM data streams in T1D patients on SAP. The study revealed significant challenges experienced by patients in reporting adequate data. Self-reported stress was not associated with hyperglycemia. However, days of self-reported stress and periods during patients reported stress were characterized by less hypoglycemia on CGM data streams.
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spelling pubmed-72073252020-05-12 SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks Kaur, Ravinder Jeet Pinsker, Jordan E Dadlani, Vikash Thapa, Prabin Batthula, Sreedhar Church, Mei Mei Reid, Corey Spitzer, Shelly McCrady Kremers, Walter K Dassau, Eyal Kudva, Yogish C J Endocr Soc Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism Introduction: Patients and their families and medical providers have assumed that psychologic stress impacts glucose control in T1D (Type 1 Diabetes) though studies providing confirmatory evidence in real world settings are, to our knowledge, lacking. We hypothesized that self-reported psychologic stress worsens glucose control in T1D. Method: We studied 20 adults with T1D on continuous glucose monitor (CGM), sensor augmented insulin pump (SAP) prospectively at 2 clinical research centers. Patients reported psychological stress through stress diaries for 5 weeks on a severity scale of 1-7 using hard copy logs including time of onset and offset of stress and severity. For analytic purpose, grades 1-4 are classified as mild and grades 5-7 as severe. Results: Baseline characteristics were age 44.9±15.0 years, F/M 12/8, HbA1c 6.8 ± 0.7%, and diabetes duration of 22.9±15.9 years. We analyzed glucose variability during days of stress versus days without stress. During a 24 hour period, patients experienced less hypoglycemia during days with stress versus days without stress (p value 0.03). During the 5 week period, patients reported 23 ± 19.5 events. We analyzed the impact of self-reported stress on CGM data streams after excluding stress events associated with missing CGM data, nocturnal events (from 12 MN to 6 AM, too few events) and events for which subjects did not provide duration of stress. Thus, we analyzed 19.5 ± 17 events per patient from 6AM to 12MN. From 6 AM to 12 MN, the episodes lasted 179 ± 255 minutes with 83 % episodes being mild/moderate and 17% moderate/ severe. Number of CGM readings during daytime stress episodes were 717± 1120 compared to 8768± 1238 during non-stress periods. Impact of stress from 6 AM to 12 MN (Mid-Night) on CGM glucose was analyzed using matched paired t test. Mean glucose (160.6±41.9 vs 148.3± 28.6) and SD (53.2 ±17.7 vs 56.1±14.6) did not show a difference; however % of time spent below 70 mg/dl was less (4 ± 5) in patients during stressful periods compared to times without stress (6.3± 5.5, P value 0.02). Conclusions: To our knowledge, this is the first study attempting to analyze the impact of self-reported stress using daily stress diaries on CGM data streams in T1D patients on SAP. The study revealed significant challenges experienced by patients in reporting adequate data. Self-reported stress was not associated with hyperglycemia. However, days of self-reported stress and periods during patients reported stress were characterized by less hypoglycemia on CGM data streams. Oxford University Press 2020-05-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7207325/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1879 Text en © Endocrine Society 2020. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits non-commercial reproduction and distribution of the work, in any medium, provided the original work is not altered or transformed in any way, and that the work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
Kaur, Ravinder Jeet
Pinsker, Jordan E
Dadlani, Vikash
Thapa, Prabin
Batthula, Sreedhar
Church, Mei Mei
Reid, Corey
Spitzer, Shelly McCrady
Kremers, Walter K
Dassau, Eyal
Kudva, Yogish C
SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title_full SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title_fullStr SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title_full_unstemmed SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title_short SAT-641 Self-Reported Psychological Stress and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes on Sensor Augmented Pump over 5 Weeks
title_sort sat-641 self-reported psychological stress and glucose variability in type 1 diabetes on sensor augmented pump over 5 weeks
topic Diabetes Mellitus and Glucose Metabolism
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7207325/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1879
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