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Effect of Low-intensity Aerobic Regular Activity on Heart Rate Variability in Type 1 Diabetes (ELARA-T1D)

U

University of Banja Luka

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Type 1 Diabetes

Treatments

Behavioral: low-intensity physical activity
Other: Intensive insulin therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07382856
PAT1D2025

Details and patient eligibility

About

A monocentric prospective randomized trial included 35 patients with Type 1 diabetes. Participants were randomized into two groups: Group A with the patients who engaged in low-intensity physical activity five days per week over a one-year observation period and Group B with the patients who engaged in physical activity less than five days per week. The study included three clinical visits: at baseline, at six months, and at one year. Assessments included cyclo-ergometry and body composition analysis during the baseline visit and at six-month visit, while 24-hour Holter monitoring was conducted at baseline and at the final visit. Biochemical parameters and microvascular complication risk assessments were performed at every visit.

Full description

The ELARA-T1D study aims to investigate the impact of regular, long-standing low-intensity aerobic physical activity on heart rate variability (HRV) and cardiovascular autonomic neuropathy (CAN) in patients with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM). While physical activity is a cornerstone of diabetes management, fear of hypoglycemia and lack of specific guidelines often prevent patients from engaging in exercise. The mechanisms by which physical activity improves cardiovascular outcomes are not yet fully understood. This study focuses on reducing cardiovascular risk in T1DM through an unstructured low-intensity physical activity five days per week for 30-60 min per exercise, in training zone 2.

This is a randomized, parallel-assignment longitudinal study. Following a screening phase (0-4 months) to verify inclusion/exclusion criteria and baseline laboratory status, eligible participants had been randomized into two groups:

Experimental Group (Group A): Introduction of low-intensity aerobic activity five days per week for 30-60 minutes. The intensity is individually determined via spiroergometry to achieve training zone 2.

Control Group (Group B): Maintenance of previous sedentary or low-activity lifestyle (not exceeding 30 minutes, less than five days per week).

The physical activity protocol is monitored using heart rate tracking (Garmin watches) to ensure patients stay within the prescribed intensity zones.

Assessment of glycemic control using the ambulatory glucose profile (APG) was conducted using a Guardian 4 continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) system (Medtronic, Northridge, CA, USA).

The study evaluates the progression of Cardiovascular Autonomic Neuropathy (CAN) using the 24-hour Holter ECG monitoring to assess HRV

The assessment schedule is as follows:

Baseline (Month 0): Laboratory testing (CBC, UACR, HbA1c, BUN, eGFR, AST, ALT, CK, lipid profile), evaluation of microvascular complications, Cardiac ultrasound, HRV assessment ( 24h Holter), spiroergometry, evaluation of glycemic control using the ambulatory glucose profile (APG).

Follow-up (Months 6): Repeat laboratory testing, spiroergometry and APG to track changes in cardiovascular fitness and metabolic control.

Final visit (Months 12): Repeat laboratory testing, evaluation of microvascular complications, HRV assessment and APG to track changes in cardiac autonomic function and metabolic control.

In addition, all subjects underwent CT coronary angiography. Long-term follow-up: Continuous monitoring every 6 months up to 60 months to evaluate the long-term sustainability of the intervention's effects on cardiovascular health and chronic vascular complications Objectives The primary goal is to determine if consistent, low-intensity exercise can delay the onset of CAN or to prevent progression of incipient CAN and improve cardiovascular fitness.

Enrollment

35 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of Type 1Diabetes at least six months prior to study enrollment
  • Male or female patients over 18 years
  • Willingness to perform physical activity 5 days/week.
  • Absence of heavy, chronic microvascular complications.
  • Absence of established Cardiovascular neuropathy.
  • Absence of established ASCVD.

Exclusion criteria

  • Type 2 Diabetes
  • Active engagement in professional sports
  • Limb amputation
  • Blindness
  • Active malignancy

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

35 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
The exercise group will consist of patients with type 1 diabetes who will perform low-intensity physical activity in the postprandial period five days per week over a one-year observation period.
Treatment:
Other: Intensive insulin therapy
Behavioral: low-intensity physical activity
Control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Type 1 diabetes patients characterized by a sedentary lifestyle, defined as engaging in low-intensity physical activity less than five days per week.
Treatment:
Other: Intensive insulin therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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