Diagnostics (Apr 2023)

Continuous Glucose Monitoring in Patients Following Simultaneous Pancreas–Kidney Transplantation: Time in Range and Glucose Variability

  • Ilya V. Dmitriev,
  • Anastasia S. Severina,
  • Nikita S. Zhuravel,
  • Madina I. Yevloyeva,
  • Rustam K. Salimkhanov,
  • Svetlana P. Shchelykalina,
  • Evgeniy A. Bezunov,
  • Minara S. Shamkhalova,
  • Julia F. Semenova,
  • Vadim V. Klimontov,
  • Marina V. Shestakova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13091606
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 1606

Abstract

Read online

Simultaneous pancreas–kidney transplantation (SPKT) can improve long-term patient survival and restore endogenous insulin secretion in recipients with type 1 diabetes (T1D). There are currently few data on glucose fluctuations assessed by continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) after SPKT. Aim: to evaluate CGM-derived time in range (TIR) and glucose variability (GV) in patients with T1D and functioning pancreatic grafts after SPKT. Fifty-four CGM recordings from 43 patients, 15 men and 28 women, aged 34 (31; 39) years were analyzed. Time since SKPT was up to 1 year (group 1, n = 13), from 1 to 5 years (group 2, n = 15), and from 5 to 12 years (group 3, n = 26). TIR (3.9–10 mmol/L), Time Above Range (TAR), Time Below Range (TBR), and GV parameters were estimated. There were no differences in mean glucose (5.5 [5.1; 6.2], 5.9 [5.4; 6.2], and 5.9 [5.6; 6.7] mmol/L), TIR (97.6 [92.8–99.1], 97.2 [93.2; 99.1], and 97.5 [93.4; 99]%); TAR (0, 1.8 [1.3; 3.7], and 2.5 [2; 5]%), TBR (5 [3.3; 12.7], 4.1 [2.2; 10.1], and 3.5 [1.3; 6.5]%) and GV parameters between three groups (all p > 0.05). Thus, recipients with functioning pancreatic grafts demonstrate remarkably high TIR and low GV after SPKT.

Keywords