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Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disorder caused by mutations in the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator (CFTR) gene, leading to pulmonary infections, sinus disease, pancreatic insufficiency, hepatobiliary disease and male infertility, with respiratory failure being the primary cause of death. Cystic Fibrosis Related Diabetes (CFRD) in one of the most common complication of cystic fibrosis (CF) and it's associated with a worse respiratory and nutritional state, with a negative impact on life expectancy. It differs from type 1 diabetes and type 2 diabetes for particular characteristics making this disease a separated clinical entity.
To date, there is a lack of evidence on many aspects concerning this disease:
For this reason, the investigators have structured a study with the aim to:
Full description
The study aims are:
Task 1: pathophysiological characterization of CFRD with assessment of the relative contribution of the insulin resistance and the β-cellular secretion impairment through the use of a Minimum Model applied to OGTT for the evaluation of insulin sensitivity and secretion
Task 2:
2a) determination of the prevalence of CFRD in relation to the mutations of the CFTR gene (presence of mutations with residual function of the CFTR protein) 2b) determination of the prevalence of CFRD in relation to the presence of candidate genes for the devel-opment of type 2 diabetes (NOTCH2, BCL11A, THADA, IGFBP-2, PPARG, ADAMTS9, CDKAL1, VEFGA, JAZF1, CDKN2A / 2B, HHEX, CDC123 / CAMK1D, TCF7L2, KCNJ11, DCD, TSPAN8 / LGR5, FTO, WFS1, SLC30A8 and INS).
2c) determination of variations in the proteomic analysis of CFRD patients compared to CF without DM and a control group of healthy individuals.
Task 3: evaluation of the effect of the therapeutic optimization of glycometabolic control on body composition and respiratory outcomes in patients on insulin therapy, in a follow-up period of 24 months.
Task 4: identification of predisposing factors for the development of post-transplant diabetes in subjects without CFRD.
METHODS:
All CF patients currently followed at the Unit of Pulmonology of our Center (250 subjects) will be considered eligible for the study.
Total duration of the study: 156 weeks (3 years).
The enrolled patients will be divided into two groups:
GROUP 1: subjects with a negative history for CFRD or with a CFRD diagnosis that does not require insulin therapy GROUP 2: subjects suffering from CFRD in insulin therapy
Protocol 1: Group 1; metabolic and anthropometric evaluation and assessment of insulin sensitivity / secretion.
Protocol 2: Group 1 and Group 2; genetic evaluation / proteomic evaluation Protocol 3: Group 2; pre- and post-intervention metabolic, anthropometric and nutritional assessment.
Protocol 4: Group 1 patients without CFRD undergoing lung transplantation (10); genetic, metabolic, an-thropometric and pre-and post-transplant assessment of insulin sensitivity / secretion.
Patients will undergo a:
SAMPLE SIZE AND STATISTICAL ANALYSIS:
Referring to the primary objective of the project, the observational nature of the study and the absence of evidence about the topic make a precise evaluation of the power of the study a difficult issue. However, considering the number of patients available and followed by our Center (n = 136), it has been calculated that the present study will have the power of 80% and an alpha level equal to 5% to show a significant reduction of at least 25% in the 1st phase secretion in the group of diabetics if compared to the non-diabetic group (assuming a mean value in non-diabetics of 1500 (aggiungere udm) and a SD of 500 (udm) (Pass v. 11 NCSS software, LCC, Kaysville, Utah, USA).
A series of descriptive analyzes will be performed: the continuous variables will be presented as averages and standard deviations or median with interquartile ranges, depending on the distribution. Frequency distributions will be presented as numbers and percentages. Data will also be presented graphically with histograms and "Box-and-Whisker" plots in order to evaluate potential anomalous values, allowing a further data-check phase in order to have reliable data for subsequent analyzes. Differences between the groups will be analyzed using parametric tests (t-test or ANOVA) without repeated tests or repeated tests, depending on the task of the project. If the normality of the distributions were violated (normal test based on the Shapiro-Wilk statistics), non-parametric technical correspondents will be used. Categorical data will be compared using contingency tables through the Chi-square test or Fisher's exact test, where appropriate. All tests will be two-tailed and p-values less than 5% will be considered statistically significant.
A series of descriptive analyzes will be performed: the continuous variables will be presented as averages and standard or median deviations with interquartile ranges, depending on the distribution. Frequency distributions will be presented as numbers and percentages. The data will also be presented graphically through histograms and "Box-and-Whisker" plots in order to evaluate potential anomalous values that will allow a further data-check phase in order to have valid data for subsequent analyzes. The differences between the groups will be analyzed using parametric techniques (t-test or ANOVA) without repeated tests or with repeated tests, depending on the task of the project. If the normality of the distributions was violated (normality test based on the Shapiro-Wilk statistics), corresponding non-parametric techniques will be used. Categorical data will be compared using contingency tables through the Chi-square test or Fisher's exact test, where appropriate. All tests will be two-tailed and a p-values less than 5% will be considered statistically significant.
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150 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Valeria Grancini, MD, PhD; Emanuela Orsi, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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