ANALYSIS OF CHRONIC KIDNEY DISEASE – ASOCIATED GLYCEMIC VARIABILITY IN PATIENTS WITH TYPE 2 DIABETES USING CONTINUOUS GLUCOSE MONITORING SYSTEM
Abstract
Background and Aims. In diabetic patients, chronic kidney disease (CKD) requires special attention due to the multitude of factors that determine glycemic variability. We aimed to assess glycemic variability in patients with CKD and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) using a continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) and identify the predictive value of inter-day and intra-day glycemic variability indices for metabolic imbalance. Material and method. We included 20 diabetic patients (10 CKD patients/10 patients without CKD) and 10 healthy volunteers. Anthropometric parameters, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), and glycemic variability indices on CGMS readings were registered. Results. CKD diabetic patients presented significantly higher inter-day and intra-day glycemic variability compared to the diabetic patients without CKD. HbA1c was not significantly different between diabetic subjects with/without CKD. ROC curves indicated that just some CGMS parameters had higher predictive value for metabolic imbalance (HbA1c≥6.5%) but only the percentage of time with glucose values>180 mg/dl (p=0.024) was an independent predictor for HbA1c≥6.5%. Conclusions. Subjects with CKD and T2DM had poor glycemic control and significantly higher glycemic variability comparative to those without CKD, and especially to healthy volunteers. Assessment of glycemic variability indices is more accurate than HbA1c for the quantification of glycemic control in CKD diabetic patients.