New Diabetic Treatment by Alleviation of Autonomic Nervous System Dysfunction Measured as Periosteal Pressure Sensitivity at Sternum Improves Empowerment, Treatment Satisfaction, and Self-Reported Health of People with Type 2 Diabetes: A Randomized Trial

Sofie Korsgaard Hecquet*, Søren Ballegaard, Ebbe Eldrup, Christian Stevns Hansen, Tine Willum Hansen, Gitte Sommer Harboe, Peter Rossing, Caroline Sophie Hjelm Pichat, Torquil Watt, Finn Gyntelberg, Nanna Ørsted, Jens Oscar Faber

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Abstract

Purpose: Autonomic nervous system dysfunction (ANSD), for which presently no treatment exists, has a negative impact on prognosis in people with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Periosteal pressure sensitivity (PPS) on sternum may be a measure of autonomic nervous system dysfunction (ANSD). We tested if a non-pharmacological PPS-feedback-guided treatment program based on non-noxious sensory nerve stimulation, known to reduce PPS, changed empowerment, treatment satisfaction, and quality of life in people with T2D, compared to usual treatment. Patients and Methods: Analysis of secondary endpoints in a single center, two-armed, parallel-group, observer-blinded, randomized controlled trial of individuals with T2D. Participants were randomized to non-pharmacological intervention as an add-on to treatment as usual. Endpoints were evaluated by five validated questionnaires: Diabetes specific Empowerment (DES-SF), Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction (DTSQ), quality of life (QOL) (WHO-5), clinical stress signs (CSS), and self-reported health (SF-36). Sample size calculation was based on the primary endpoint HbA1c. Results: We included 144 participants, 71 allocated to active intervention and 73 to the control group. Active intervention compared to control revealed improved diabetes-specific empowerment (p = 0.004), DTSQ (p = 0.001), and SF-36 self-reported health (p=0.003) and tended to improve quality of life (WHO-5) (p = 0.056). The findings were clinically relevant with a Cohen's effect size of 0.5 to 0.7. Conclusion: This non-pharmacological intervention, aiming to reduce PPS, and thus ANSD, improved diabetes-specific empower-ment, treatment satisfaction, and self-reported health when compared to usual treatment. The proposed intervention may be a supplement to conventional treatment for T2D.

Original languageEnglish
JournalDiabetes, Metabolic Syndrome and Obesity
Volume17
Pages (from-to)2519-2531
Number of pages13
ISSN1178-7007
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Hecquet et al. This work is published and licensed by Dove Medical Press Limited.

Keywords

  • autonomic nervous system dysfunction
  • empowerment
  • periosteal pressure sensitivity
  • type 2 diabetes

Cite this