Dr. Kenneth Strauss, co-author and medical director, BD Europe stated, “FITTER and these publications set new standards for insulin delivery. Tools are embedded in these publications, which will allow patients and professionals to quickly translate them into everyday practice. If these recommendations become routine practice, we should soon see the improved outcomes that come from optimized insulin delivery.”
The analysis of this landmark injection technique survey is the result of a BD (Becton, Dickinson and Company) sponsored international workshop known as the Forum for Injection Technique & Therapy Expert Recommendations (FITTER). This international congress included 183 diabetes experts from 54 countries and took place October 2015 in Rome. Two of the papers published in Mayo Clinic Proceedings address the key findings from this injection technique survey and a third paper presents the new insulin delivery recommendations, intended to help shape local and regional injection guidelines around the world.
Insulin Injection Technique Survey Key Takeaways:
- Many patients taking insulin are using needles that are longer and thicker than recommended, and are reusing the needles frequently.
- One-third of those taking insulin have nodules or bumps in the fat
tissue at their injection sites (a condition known as lipohypertrophy,
or lipos). This is associated with incorrect rotation of injection sites
and is also problematic with insulin infused via pumps.
- If patients inject into lipos, the absorption of insulin is blunted and highly variable. This may cause patients to react by injecting more insulin, which puts them at risk of unexpected glucose swings and dangerous hypoglycemia.
- Despite using more insulin, patients with lipos have worse glucose control, increasing their risk for eye, kidney and nerve complications.
The new FITTER recommendations include:
- Use the shortest available pen needle (currently 4mm) or syringe
needle (currently 6mm) for all injecting patients, regardless of age,
sex or body size.
- The shortest needle length is less painful, has higher patient acceptance and gives comparable glucose control.
- By contrast, excessively long needles increase a patient’s risk of intramuscular injections, which can accelerate insulin uptake and action, increasing glucose variability and risk of hypoglycemia.
- Correct rotation of injection sites can reduce the frequency of lipohypertrophy. Such reductions should improve glycemic control and clinical outcomes, reduce insulin consumption and thereby lower health care costs.
- Limit use of pen needles and syringes to one-time, as reusing needles is not an optimal injection practice because they are no longer sterile after use.
“BD’s purpose of advancing the world of health expands far beyond the products we make. We partner with health care professionals around the world to publish evidence-based practices in peer-reviewed publications and create educational tools that can help people with diabetes achieve better clinical outcomes,” said Dr. Laurence Hirsch, co-author and worldwide vice president of Medical Affairs for BD Diabetes Care. “These new recommendations will help health care professionals and people with diabetes who take insulin to better manage their treatment.”
Dr. Anders H. Frid, lead author and Diabetologist at the Skane University Hospital, Malmö in Sweden added, “For more than 30 years, I have been studying injection sites, injection technique and insulin absorption. It is a wonderful accomplishment to now have comprehensive and evidence-based recommendations around proper needle use and good injection practices published in a major journal for health care professionals and people with diabetes around the world to access.”
Source: Becton, Dickinson and Company (BD)
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