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About
This study compares insulin icodec (a new insulin taken once a week) to insulin glargine (an insulin taken once daily which is already available on the market) in people with type 2 diabetes.
The study will look at how well insulin icodec taken weekly controls blood sugar compared to insulin glargine taken daily.
Participants will either get insulin icodec that participants will have to inject once a week on the same day of the week or insulin glargine that participants will have to inject once a day at the same time every day. Which treatment participants will get is decided by chance. Participants will also get a mealtime insulin.The insulin is injected with a needle in a skin fold in the thigh, upper arm or stomach.
The study will last for about 8 months. participants will have 17 clinic visits and 13 phone calls with the study doctor.At 8 clinic visits participants will have blood samples taken. At 4 clinic visits participants cannot eat or drink (except for water) for 8 hours before the visit. Participants will be asked to wear a sensor that measures their blood sugar all the time in 3 periods for a total of 13 weeks (about 3 months) during the study.
Women cannot take part if pregnant, breast-feeding or plan to become pregnant during the study period.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Metformin / Sulfonylureas / Meglitinides (glinides) / DPP-4 inhibitors / SGLT2 inhibitors / Thiazolidinediones / Alpha-glucosidase inhibitors / Oral combination products (for the allowed individual oral anti-diabetic drugs) / Oral or injectable GLP-1-receptor agonists
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
582 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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