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Abstract ContextYouth with type 1 diabetes (T1D) struggle to meet and sustain hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) targets. Youth enrolled in the Pilot 4T Study improved HbA1c by 0.5% at 1 year, compared to historical controls. ObjectiveTo assess 3 years of glycemic outcomes in the Pilot 4T Study. MethodsThe Pilot 4T Extension cohort was prospectively followed to determine changes in HbA1c and continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) metrics over 3 years at the Stanford Medicine Children's Health Diabetes Clinic. Youth with T1D in the Pilot 4T Study enrolled in the extension phase started CGM in the first month of diabetes diagnosis, received intensified education and remote patient monitoring (RPM) weekly for the first year of diabetes diagnosis, and monthly RPM in the extension phase. HbA1c and CGM metrics were evaluated over the first 3 years of diagnosis. ResultsIn the Pilot 4T cohort, 78.5% (n = 102) of participants enrolled in the study extension phase and were followed through 3 years. The adjusted difference in HbA1c at 3 years was 1.2% (95% CI 0.7%-1.7%) lower in the Pilot 4T cohort than in the Historical cohort. In the Pilot 4T cohort, 68% and 37% met the <7.5% and <7% HbA1c targets at 3 years, respectively, compared to 37% and 20% in the Historical cohort. ConclusionYouth with T1D in the Pilot 4T extension phase sustained improvements in HbA1c over 3 years. Focusing resources on intensive management during the first year after T1D diagnosis may impact long-term glycemia.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 10, 2026
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Prahalad, Priya; Scheinker, David; Desai, Manisha; Ding, Victoria Y; Bishop, Franziska K; Lee, Ming Yeh; Ferstad, Johannes; Zaharieva, Dessi P; Addala, Ananta; Johari, Ramesh; et al (, Nature Medicine)
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Zaharieva, Dessi P; Ding, Victoria Y; Addala, Ananta; Prahalad, Priya; Bishop, Franziska; Hood, Korey K; Desai, Manisha; Wilson, Darrell M; Buckingham, Bruce A; Maahs, David M (, Diabetes Technology & Therapeutics)
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