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Coin2Dose: Behavioral Economics to Promote Insulin BOLUS Activity and Improve HbA1c in Teens

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Nemours Children's Health

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Type 1 Diabetes

Treatments

Behavioral: Coin2Dose

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05280184
1770218

Details and patient eligibility

About

Our objective is to test the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of using behavioral economics incentives (BEI) in a novel, semi-automated intervention to target daily insulin BOLUS scores in adolescents with suboptimal insulin use.

Full description

This R01 responds to PAS-20-160 (Small R01s for Clinical Trials Targeting Diseases within the Mission of NIDDK). Our objective is to test the feasibility, acceptability, and initial efficacy of using behavioral economics incentives (BEI) in a novel, semi-automated intervention to target daily insulin BOLUS scores in adolescents with suboptimal insulin use. There is a critical need for efficacious and easy to implement interventions targeting self-management behaviors in adolescents with type 1 diabetes (T1D). This is because national registry data suggest that only between 15-28% of adolescents achieve their glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) target, thereby placing the majority of them at increased risk for serious acute and long-term complications. BEI interventions are efficacious for promoting health behaviors including frequency of self-monitoring blood glucose (SMBG) in youth. Moreover, there is evidence that BEI can be relatively easy to implement, especially when using Non-Contingent BEI. But with the uptake of integrated insulin pump and continuous glucose monitor (CGM) systems and the new FDA approval enabling youth to dose for insulin based solely on CGM, we believe the long-term value of targeting SMBG alone in BEI interventions is limited and that daily insulin use is the next logical self-management target. Building off of our prior work, the insulin BOLUS score offers a specific, measurable, and valid treatment target for daily insulin use that is also more closely related to HbA1c than SMBG or Total insulin boluses per day. Thus our Aims are: 1) examine the feasibility and acceptability of our semi-automated BEI intervention (called Coin2Dose) that targets daily BOLUS scores in adolescents and 2) examine the preliminary efficacy of Coin2Dose versus a standard care control (SC) group on youth daily BOLUS scores, HbA1c, and glucose time in range (TIR). We also include an exploratory aim to examine the incremental impact of using Contingent versus Non-Contingent BEI within our Coin2Dose intervention on youth's BOLUS scores, HbA1c, and TIR. Coin2Dose will deliver automated text messages to cue adolescents to bolus for insulin, plus BEI for daily BOLUS activity. To enhance the scientific rigor of this R01, we will use the ORBIT Model for behavioral intervention development. Consistent with this model, we will recruit 180 adolescents and a parent to participate in 1- a telehealth focus group (ORBIT Phase 1a: Define; n= 20), 2- a formative pre-test (ORBIT Phase 1b: Refine; n=10), or 3- a pilot randomized clinical trial (ORBIT Phase 2: RCT Pilot; n=150). Our RCT Pilot will randomize teens with suboptimal insulin use (BOLUS score <2.5; 70% of teens based on pilot data) to a SC or 1 of 2 versions of Coin2Dose that only differ based on our use of personalized (Contingent) v. non-personalized (Non-Contingent) BEI. Adolescents will participate in 12-weeks of active treatment, plus a 12-week follow-up period. This small R01 is Significant for its potential to yield: 1- preliminary data supporting our new BEI intervention targeting daily BOLUS scores, which may also improve youth HbA1c, 2- novel data exploring the incremental impact of Contingent v. Non-Contingent BEI, which has implications for Coin2Dose as well as the broader uptake of BEI interventions.

Enrollment

150 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

11 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • adolescents between 11.0-17.0 years old and their parent/guardian;
  • adolescents have a physician confirmed diagnosis of type 1 diabetes of at least 6 months duration;
  • adolescents use an insulin pump for daily type 1 diabetes self-management;
  • adolescents evidence sub-optimal daily BOLUS scores (a mean daily BOLUS score <2.5)

Exclusion criteria

  • adolescents who do not use an insulin pump; adolescents who have an allergy or sensitivity to the adhesive and/or skin preparation used for CGM;
  • adolescents with a comorbid chronic condition (e.g., renal disease);
  • adolescents and parents who do not speak English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

150 participants in 2 patient groups

Coin2Dose
Experimental group
Description:
BEI intervention that also combines automated text message reminders to dose for insulin; will test Contingent and Non-Contingent BEI
Treatment:
Behavioral: Coin2Dose
Standard Care Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard care control group; will not receive automated text message reminders to dose for insulin nor BEI for daily BOLUS scores

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Kristen Morga; Susana R Patton, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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