The role of continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy in patients with diabetic gastroparesis
Diabetologia - Clinical and Experimental Diabetes and Metabolism, 08/18/2011
Sharma D et al. – Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) therapy in patients with diabetic gastroparesis results in significant improvement in glycaemic control and reductions in glycaemic variability and number of hospital inpatient bed days.
Methods- Data from 26 patients with symptomatic diabetic gastroparesis and unstable glycaemic control using multiple–dose insulin (MDI) regimens, and subsequently managed with CSII, were analysed.
- Following initiation of CSII, the median length of inpatient bed days associated with hospital admissions related to gastroparesis and glycaemic instability was reduced from 8.5 (range 0–144) days patient –1year –1 prior to CSII to 0 (range 0–15) days patient –1year –1.
- The median HbA1c reduction with CSII was 1.8% (22 mmol/mol; p<0.05).
- The median capillary blood glucose (CBG) with CSII was significantly lower than with MDI: 7.7 mmol/l (range 3.8–15.4 mmol/l) vs 9.8 mmol/l (range 2.3–27 mmol/l), respectively, p<0.001.
- Glycaemic variability with CSII was significantly reduced compared with MDI: CBG CV 0.37 vs CV 0.53, respectively, p<0.001.







