Journal article
Authors list: Auzanneau, Marie; Karges, Beate; Neu, Andreas; Kapellen, Thomas; Wudy, Stefan A.; Grasemann, Corinna; Krauch, Gabriele; Gerstl, Eva Maria; Daeublin, Gerhard; Holl, Reinhard W.
Publication year: 2021
Pages: 597-606
Journal: European Journal of Pediatrics
Volume number: 180
Issue number: 2
ISSN: 0340-6199
eISSN: 1432-1076
Open access status: Hybrid
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-020-03883-2
Publisher: Springer
In pediatric diabetes, insulin pump therapy is associated with less acute complications but inpatient pump education may lead to more hospital days. We investigated the number of hospital days associated with pump vs. injection therapy between 2009 and 2018 in 48,756 patients with type 1 diabetes < 20 years of age from the German Diabetes Prospective Follow-up Registry (DPV). Analyses were performed separately for hospitalizations at diagnosis (hierarchical linear models adjusted for sex, age, and migration), and for hospitalizations in the subsequent course of the disease (hierarchical Poisson models stratified by sex, age, migration, and therapy switch). At diagnosis, the length of hospital stay was longer with pump therapy than with injection therapy (mean estimate with 95% CI: 13.6 [13.3-13.9] days vs. 12.8 [12.5-13.1] days, P < 0.0001), whereas during the whole follow-up beyond diagnosis, the number of hospital days per person-year (/PY) was higher with injection therapy than with pump therapy (4.4 [4.1-4.8] vs. 3.9 [3.6-4.2] days/PY), especially for children under 5 years of age (4.9 [4.4-5.6] vs. 3.5 [3.1-3.9] days/PY). Conclusions: Even in countries with hospitalizations at diabetes diagnosis of longer duration, the use of pump therapy is associated with a reduced number of hospital days in the long-term.
Abstract:
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Auzanneau, M., Karges, B., Neu, A., Kapellen, T., Wudy, S., Grasemann, C., et al. (2021) Use of insulin pump therapy is associated with reduced hospital-days in the long-term: a real-world study of 48,756 pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes, European Journal of Pediatrics, 180(2), pp. 597-606. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-020-03883-2
APA Citation style: Auzanneau, M., Karges, B., Neu, A., Kapellen, T., Wudy, S., Grasemann, C., Krauch, G., Gerstl, E., Daeublin, G., & Holl, R. (2021). Use of insulin pump therapy is associated with reduced hospital-days in the long-term: a real-world study of 48,756 pediatric patients with type 1 diabetes. European Journal of Pediatrics. 180(2), 597-606. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-020-03883-2
Keywords
Hospital days; Hospitalization; Insulin pump therapy