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About
The overall objective of this study is to evaluate glycemic control and patient-reported outcomes in patients with Type 1 diabetes (T1D) who use insulin degludec and continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion in a combination untethered regimen during moderate or high-intensity exercise.
Full description
FIT untethered is an open-label, randomized, repeated measures cross-over design study, testing glycemic control in "untethered" continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) therapy compared to usual CSII therapy, in physically active patients with T1D (N=30). During 2-week screening visits, participants are randomized into either the usual CSII arm or the untethered CSII arm. Patients in the usual group continue with their established CSII therapy. Patients in the untethered group are to administer 50% of their basal dose through an insulin degludec injection every morning, with the other 50% achieved through their established CSII therapy. Bolus insulin remains at the established dose in both groups. After randomization, patients begin Phase I and transition into a 2-week insulin optimization period. Then, participants will complete 2 in-clinic, supervised exercise visits (1 moderate and 1 high intensity exercises) in the following week. After, participants must complete 2 unsupervised at-home exercises per week for 3 weeks (cumulative total of 2 moderate and 4 high intensity exercises). After the home exercise period, participants cross-over to the other study arm and begin Phase II. Phase II is similar to Phase I: 2 weeks of insulin dose optimization, 1 week of supervised clinic exercise, and 3 weeks of unsupervised home exercise. For both in-clinic and home-based exercise, the participant's insulin pump will be disconnected and suspended 60 minutes prior to beginning the workout, and will be reconnected immediately following each workout. A continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) device will be worn by each participant for the entire duration of the study. The co-primary outcomes of the study include time in range (4.0 - 10.0 mmol/L) in the 6 hours after the start of moderate- and high-intensity exercise. The key secondary outcomes include the glucose variability during the 24 hour period after the start of both moderate and high intensity exercise, and patient reported outcomes before and after exercise.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or lactating
Already using a split regimen of combination CSII and basal insulin injection
Active diabetic retinopathy (proliferated diabetic retinopathy, or vitreous hemorrhage in past 6 months) that could potentially be worsened by the exercise protocol
Any evidence of unstable cardiovascular disease, disorders or abnormalities as per physician's discretion
Currently following a very low calorie or other weight-loss diet which may impact glucose control and mask the primary and secondary outcome measures
More than one episode of severe hypoglycemia with seizure, coma or requiring assistance of another person during the past 6 months
Known hypoglycemia unawareness
Use of acetaminophen (Tylenol) during the study period
Medications other than insulin that might impact outcome measures:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Ronnie Aronson, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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