Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Over 1 million patients globally currently manage their Type 1 Diabetes mellitus using continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion with an infusion set that needs to be changed every 3 days. This study will assess the feasibility and device performance of the study device, the Achilles infusion set over three periods during routine insulin infusion.
This study will include 20 participants and has 3 periods:
Period 1 (up to 7 days): Trial run with study device with saline infusion. Period 2 (up to 7 days): participants will manage their blood glucose solely with their insulin pump and the Achilles infusion set. Blood glucose will be closely monitored with a continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device.
Period 3 (up to 7 days): Participants will return to study center to receive a fresh Achilles infusion set and continue blood glucose management at home until infusion set failure or 7 days.
Full description
This is a prospective, non-randomized, home-use feasibility study of device performance, usability, tolerability, and safety of the Capillary Biomedical, Inc. (CapBio) Achilles infusion set for continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII or insulin pump therapy) in up to 20 participants diagnosed with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM).
The CapBio Achilles infusion set is a sterile single use device designed to be used with commercially available infusion pumps (e.g., Medtronic MiniMed). The investigational Achilles infusion set contains a coil reinforced soft polymer indwelling cannula with one distal and three proximal holes.
The primary objective of this study is to determine feasibility and device performance of the CapBio Achilles infusion set over 2 extended home use wear periods of up to 7 days each during routine therapeutic insulin infusion. Feasibility is evidenced by the absence of uncontrolled hyperglycemia and/or suspected infusion set cannula occlusion.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Participants whose average total daily insulin dose exceeds 85 units per day (i.e. typically change insulin reservoirs more often than every 3.5 days on average)
Participants who routinely change their commercial insulin infusion sets twice weekly or less often (wear time greater than 3.5 days)
Female participant is pregnant or nursing (Documented negative pregnancy test results for female participants required unless participant is menopausal without any spontaneous menstrual cycles for >12 months or key organs have been removed.)
Participant has abnormal skin at intended device infusion sites (existing infection, inflammation, burns, or other extensive scarring)
Participant has HbA1C greater than 8.5 percent at screening
Participant has documented history in last 6 months of severe hypoglycemia associated with cognitive dysfunction sufficiently severe to require third party intervention or a history of impaired awareness of hypoglycemia.
Participant has a history of diabetic ketoacidosis in the last 6 months
Participant has known cardiovascular disease considered to be clinically relevant by the investigator
Participant has known arrhythmias considered to be clinically relevant by the investigator
Participant has known history of:
Participant has:
Participant is undergoing current treatment with:
Subject has significant history of any of the following, that in the opinion of the investigator would compromise the subject's safety or successful study participation:
Significant acute or chronic illness, that in the investigator's opinion, might interfere with subject safety or integrity of study results
Planned operation, MRI or CT which require removal of infusion set or CGM sensor during wear periods
Current participation in another clinical drug or device study
AST and ALT greater than 120 U per L
Creatinine equal to or greater than 1.8 mg per dL -
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal