Disease management programmes (DMPs) should be regularly updated to adapt them to the current state of medical knowledge. Requirements for the content of DMPs are laid down in a directive of the Federal Joint Committee (G-BA), the main decision-maker in the German health care system, and are applied nationwide. On behalf of the G-BA, the Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG) therefore searched for current evidence-based clinical practice guidelines on type 1 diabetes, summarized their recommendations to key statements, and evaluated whether a need for revision of the DMP arises from them.
According to the final report, the need for revision particularly concerns the avoidance of hypoglycemia by means of modern technologies as well as patient education. Less focus was placed on these topics in the preliminary report. This is primarily due to fact that the Institute was able to include new guidelines in its final assessment.
Update recommended for all health care aspects
The IQWiG researchers were able to include a total of 37 guidelines in their final analysis compared with 32 in the preliminary report. In addition, an update was available for a number of guidelines. They extracted a total of 2817 recommendations from 37 guidelines. These refer to a wide variety of health care aspects, such as diagnostics, treatment, or collaboration between the professional groups involved. The Institute did not evaluate the content of the recommendations.
Technical aids can support blood sugar regulation
As the Institute concludes after comparing guideline recommendations and the directive, the content of all health care aspects of the DMP "type 1 diabetes" could be updated ("potential need for update"). However, updating is required, among other things, regarding the avoidance of low blood sugar levels (hypoglycemia), because this has become an important treatment goal, also in type 1 diabetes.
A number of modern technical aids have been introduced that help patients to regulate their blood sugar levels. For instance, continuous glucose monitoring (CGM), where sensor electrodes are placed under the skin, is being increasingly used. Some devices offer an alarm function that indicates imminent hypoglycemia. If CGM is combined with an insulin pump, insulin administration can be automatically stopped or reduced; this is supposed to, among other things, prevent nocturnal hypoglycemia. The new guidelines analyzed for the final report consider these technologies, but they are missing in the DMP.
Patients should update their knowledge by means of patient education
The DMP directive specifies only few requirements for the content and frequency of patient education. According to newer guidelines, repeated patient education (e.g. as refresher or supplementary patient education) can support affected patients in their daily lives, for instance, if they have trouble implementing treatment recommendations.
Not only smoking cessation is important in type 1 diabetes
The DMP has long contained the chapter "Advice for smokers". In fact, the guidelines contain a whole range of recommendations that can be described as a "healthy lifestyle". This involves not only tobacco and alcohol consumption, but also diet and exercise. The Institute proposes summarizing these recommendations under one item, "Lifestyle management", and extending its content.
Relevance of insulin analogs has increased in guidelines
Discrepant statements were noted by the Institute with regard to the type of insulin that patients with type 1 diabetes inject: While the DMP assumes that human insulin is the treatment of choice, in the new guidelines insulin analogs are now regarded as equivalent.
For these four aspects, namely, new technologies, patient education, lifestyle management, and insulin analogs, the IQWiG researchers view the need for revision in the final report to be greater than in the preliminary report.