LIPODISTROFIE
[S] Cutaneous lipodystrophies from insulin injection, hypoglycaemia and costs.
Lipodystrophies resulting from poor injection technique are a cause of hypoglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetic patients, with repercussions on quality of life and costs.
The project demonstrates how a brief educational intervention on injection technique reduces hypoglycaemic episodes, hospitalisation and costs.
The project
In insulin-treated diabetic patients, hypoglycaemic episodes (HYPO) represent the most feared acute complication and adversely affect glycemic control, quality of life and treatment adherence.
Among their causes, lipodystrophies due to poor injection technique are systematically overlooked during outpatient visits, which are overloaded with activity and often lack a structured protocol for inspecting injection sites.
The innovative project involves selecting patients with recurrent HYPO, systematic inspection of injection sites using a validated inspection grid, and a brief educational session with a Becton Dickinson kit.
The comparison between the three months before and the three months after the intervention revealed significant changes in HYPO frequency, reduction in insulin doses, emergency-department visits and direct costs, confirming the feasibility of a model replicable in routine clinical practice.
Results
The primary objective is to demonstrate that an educational intervention on injection technique reduces the frequency and severity of HYPO in the following three months compared with the preceding three months.
Secondary objectives include: reduction of total insulin doses through more consistent absorption; decrease in emergency-department visits and hospitalisations for severe HYPO; quantification of direct-cost savings through national indicators; and improvement in quality of life and reduction in the hypoglycaemia-related fear.
From an organisational standpoint, the project aims to verify the feasibility of integrating site inspection and educational counselling as a routine standard of the diabetology visit, without an additional workload for the team, with a view to proposing the model to other centres.
The results include a documented reduction in HYPO — both mild and severe — in the period following the educational intervention, accompanied by a decrease in daily insulin doses and glycemic variability.
From an economic standpoint, a measurable decline in direct costs was reported: fewer emergency-department visits, fewer hospital admissions, fewer emergency calls and fewer working days lost, with further savings linked to reduced insulin consumption.
Patients reported an improvement in quality of life and greater autonomy in daily activities.
The project also produced a mapping of the prevalence of lipodystrophies in the sample and provided proof of concept that a brief, standardised educational intervention is effective, sustainable and replicable on a larger scale.