Skip to main content

Write a PREreview

Anthropometric and Laboratory Markers Associated with Glycemic Imbalance in Adults on Insulin Therapy

Posted
Server
Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202512.0742.v1

Objectives: To analyze the anthropometric and laboratory levels associated in adults with diabetes on insulin therapy, monitored by Brazilian Primary Health Care. Methods: Cross-sectional study conducted from August 2024 to January 2025 in 17 Basic Health Units. The final sample included 60 adults (≥18 years) with confirmed type 1 or type 2 diabetes, responsible for insulin preparation and self-administration for at least 6 months. Sociodemographic, clinical, anthropometric, and laboratory data (HbA1c, fasting blood glucose, and blood pressure) were collected by trained undergraduate researchers. Normality was tested using the Shapiro-Wilk test, and variables were described using means, SD, 95% CI, and absolute/relative frequencies. One-sample t-tests compared observed means to international clinical targets (p < 0.05). Results: Most of participants had type 2 diabetes (71.7%), diagnosed >10 years ago (54.9%), and 50% did not perform daily self-monitoring of blood glucose. Insulin therapy was long-established with 90% with >1 year of continuous use. Clinical means were significantly higher than recommended targets for HbA1c (mean = 9.08%; 86.7% altered; p < 0.001) and fasting blood glucose (mean = 198.7 mg/dL; 81.7% altered; p < 0.001). Overweight/excess adiposity were frequent (BMI mean = 26.5 ± 4.85; 58.3% altered), and 63.3% had increased waist circumference. Calf and neck circumferences suggested emerging body-composition risk in part of the sample. Conclusions: Adults on established insulin therapy showed persistent glycemic imbalance and a high frequency of clinically anthropometric risk markers. The findings reinforce the need for individualized metabolic monitoring structured PHC interventions to support safe insulin self-administration.

You can write a PREreview of Anthropometric and Laboratory Markers Associated with Glycemic Imbalance in Adults on Insulin Therapy. A PREreview is a review of a preprint and can vary from a few sentences to a lengthy report, similar to a journal-organized peer-review report.

Before you start

We will ask you to log in with your ORCID iD. If you don’t have an iD, you can create one.

What is an ORCID iD?

An ORCID iD is a unique identifier that distinguishes you from everyone with the same or similar name.

Start now