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Ambulatory Glucose Profile According to Different Phases of the Menstrual Cycle in Women Living With Type 1 Diabetes

Sopio Tatulashvili, Jean‐Baptiste Julla, Nanthara Sritharan, I. Rezgani, Vincent Lévy, H. Bihan, Jean‐Pierre Riveline, Emmanuel Cosson

2022The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

CONTEXT: Some women living with type 1 diabetes complain of changes in glucose values according to the different phases of menstruation. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate this variability through continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) data in type 1 diabetes patients. DESIGN: Observational study. SETTING: Ambulatory data, recruitment in 2 centers in the Paris region. PATIENTS: Twenty-four women with type 1 diabetes having spontaneous menstrual cycles. INTERVENTION: Collection of CGM data for 62 spontaneous menstrual cycles, with evaluation of five 3-day phases during each cycle: (1) early follicular (menstruations), (2) mid-follicular, (3) peri-ovulatory, (4) mid-luteal, and (5) late luteal. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Time in range (TIR, prespecified). RESULTS: TIR decreased for each consecutive phase (61 ± 18%; 59 ± 18%; 59 ± 20%; 57 ± 18%; and 55 ± 20%, P = 0.02). The linear mixed model highlighted a decrease in TIR in the mid-luteal (P = 0.03) and late luteal (P < 0.001) phases compared with the early follicular phase. Time above range was significantly higher during the late luteal phase than the early follicular phase (P = 0.003). Time below range was significantly higher during the mid-follicular phase than in the early follicular phase. CONCLUSION: In most of the study population, glucose levels rose linearly throughout the menstrual cycle, reaching a maximum in the late luteal phase. A sharp decrease was seen for most participants at the beginning of menstrual bleeding. This should be taken into consideration in daily care of type 1 diabetes patients to avoid hypoglycemia.

Topics & Concepts

Luteal phaseFollicular phaseMenstrual cycleInternal medicineEndocrinologyMedicineType 1 diabetesMenstruationDiabetes mellitusPopulationType 2 diabetesHormoneEnvironmental healthOvarian function and disordersGestational Diabetes Research and ManagementDiabetes Management and Research