AACE Calls for New Standards for Safer Insulin Pump Use
Posted on Fri, May. 09, 2008
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. --
"The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists applauds
the FDA's efforts to protect the safety of children and adolescents
who are using insulin pumps," said Dr. Richard Hellman, the
Association's President.
In the May edition of Pediatrics, Dr. Judith Cope, a physician at
the FDA, provided new data that shows there is a serious problem
regarding patient safety in insulin pump use. She reported data on
1594 injuries and 13 deaths in children and adolescents collected over
10 years. 82% of the cases resulted in hospitalization. The most
common single issue was lack of education, and neither the patient nor
the responsible adult knew enough about how the pump worked to avoid
the injury or death that resulted. Although there were some cases due
to mechanical malfunction of the pump, most problems were the result
of human factors involved in the use of the pumps.
Unfortunately, the FDA has not yet provided similar data regarding
the numbers of serious injuries in the larger group of pump users,
adults who are using insulin pumps. This data, which is critically
important, is very difficult to obtain, and only the FDA is likely to
have the ability to have access to the data of injuries and deaths
from all of the manufacturers of insulin pumps.
There is every reason to be concerned that the data from insulin
pump use in adults will also indicate a significant number of injuries
and deaths similar to those found in the pediatric study. "The factors
noted in the pediatric study that contributed to poor outcomes in
children and adolescents can be expected to be present in a
significant proportion of the adult population on insulin pumps," said
Dr. Hellman.
Limited access to education at the time of initiation of pump
therapy was a common problem in children and adolescents. It may be
even more of a problem in adults. So is the lack of availability of
support for pump use in emergencies. Many physicians and their staff
who care for patients on insulin pumps are not sufficiently
knowledgeable about the pump's performance to be able to troubleshoot
when the patient makes a mistake or the pump malfunctions. Although
telephone support is usually available from the manufacturer, the
support personnel are neither the prescribers of the insulin doses nor
directly involved in the patient's care.
In addition, as inadequate insurance coverage for adults becomes
more common, new barriers to continuing care develop. Moreover, many
new pumps are very sophisticated and complex, and their complexity can
overwhelm even experienced users and greatly increase the risk of
error in patients who are inexperienced with pumps or distracted,
anxious, depressed, or having any transient cognitive problems as
often occurs with either severely low or high blood glucose levels.
Dr. Hellman said that the American Association of Clinical
Endocrinologists has an annual program, now in its third year, to
teach and provide hands-on experience to all physicians completing
specialized training in endocrinology. They are taught how to care for
patients on insulin pumps, how to protect them from harm due to pump
malfunction, and how to improve their patient's skills in using an
insulin pump safely and well. The physicians find the program most
valuable, but more such programs are needed. "This past year we
appointed a task force of pump experts to develop guidelines and
standards for initiating pump use and what we consider essential to
provide for the safe and effective medical care of those on insulin
pumps."
The American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists is very
supportive of insulin pump technology and believes more patients can
benefit from these pumps. But it is also clear that there are a
significant number of patients who should not have been placed on
these pumps. Dr. Hellman said, "These include patients with severe
emotional problems that distract them from their safe self-care, as
well as patients who cannot deal with the complexity of the pumps,
suffer cognitive overload as a result, and do poorly. Most patients
need more education and informed medical support, and nearly all do
better in an integrated program that coordinates their diabetic care.
But a continuing problem is that the education, both initial and
continuing, and the medical support to deal with the specific problems
and needs of pump users, is neither being provided nor paid for. As a
result, we have a patient safety problem that may not be the pump
itself, but a system's problem, that is, a failure of the system of
care for pump support. The FDA needs to obtain the safety data on
insulin pumps and share it with the scientific community as soon as
possible. We need to move forward to make insulin pump use safer and
allow for the elimination of the deaths and injuries in pump use as
those reported by Dr. Cope and the FDA team."
About AACE
AACE is a professional medical organization with more than 6,000
members in the United States and 84 other countries. Founded in 1991,
AACE is dedicated to the optimal care of patients with endocrine
problems. AACE initiatives inform the public about endocrine
disorders. AACE also conducts continuing education programs for
clinical endocrinologists, physicians whose advanced, specialized
training enables them to be experts in the care of endocrine disease,
such as diabetes, thyroid disorders, growth hormone deficiency,
osteoporosis, cholesterol disorders, hypertension and obesity.
American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists
Bryan Campbell, 904-353-7878 ext. 122
bcampbell@aace.com
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