Current medical research and opinion
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Although insulin is the most effective diabetes medication for lowering blood glucose, how insulin is used in clinical practice and how well patients respond to insulin therapy over the course of several years has not been documented. Our objective was to describe glycemic control, side-effects and dose titration over 7 years among persons starting insulin in a health plan that has long used a treatment algorithm similar to the current American Diabetes Association/European Association for the Study of Diabetes (ADA-EASD) algorithm for the management of hyperglycemia. ⋯ Insulin lowered mean A1C by about 1.5 percentage points to stable levels, but this required ongoing dosage increases. Nevertheless, many patients remained in poor control. Insulin is effective when used per ADA-EASD guidelines but health plans wishing to optimize diabetes care may need to intensify insulin therapy or consider the use of adjunct therapies in the years after initiation. This study was limited by its observational descriptive design, and its reliance on insulin purchases rather than actual consumption.