GLPwatch

Glucose Variability: Timing, Risk Analysis, and Relationship to Hypoglycemia in Diabetes.

Diabetes Care · 2016

Last updated 2026-05-28

Glucose variability—how much and how quickly blood sugar levels change—plays a key role in diabetes management and the risk of low blood sugar (hypoglycemia). New continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) technology allows real-time tracking of these fluctuations, helping to link their speed and size to health outcomes. The balance between avoiding hypoglycemia and controlling average blood sugar (measured by HbA1c) is central to diabetes care, and high glucose variability can make this balance harder to achieve, even with advanced treatments like automated insulin systems.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Care, 2016
Citations176
Relative citation ratio7.71
NIH percentile96
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Glucose control, glucose variability (GV), and risk for hypoglycemia are intimately related, and it is now evident that GV is important in both the physiology and pathophysiology of diabetes. However, its quantitative assessment is complex because blood glucose (BG) fluctuations are characterized by both amplitude and timing. Additional numerical complications arise from the asymmetry of the BG scale. In this Perspective, we focus on the acute manifestations of GV, particularly on hypoglycemia, and review measures assessing the amplitude of GV from routine self-monitored BG data, as well as its timing from continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) data. With availability of CGM, the latter is not only possible but also a requirement-we can now assess rapid glucose fluctuations in real time and relate their speed and magnitude to clinically relevant outcomes. Our primary message is that diabetes control is all about optimization and balance between two key markers-frequency of hypoglycemia and HbA1c reflecting average BG and primarily driven by the extent of hyperglycemia. GV is a primary barrier to this optimization, including to automated technologies such as the "artificial pancreas." Thus, it is time to standardize GV measurement and thereby streamline the assessment of its two most important components-amplitude and timing.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 27208366 ↗