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Fully Closed-Loop Insulin Delivery in Abdominal Surgery (CLAB)

L

Lia Bally

Status

Completed

Conditions

Artificial Pancreas
Elective Surgery
Perioperative Hyperglycaemia
Colon Disease
Pancreatic Disease
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
Gastric Disease
Insulin Therapy
Closed-Loop Glucose Control
Liver Diseases

Treatments

Device: CamAPS HX
Drug: Standard insulin therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of the study is to assess the efficacy, safety and usability of perioperative fully-automated closed-loop insulin delivery versus standard insulin therapy in patients with diabetes other than type 1 diabetes undergoing elective major abdominal surgery.

Full description

The prevalence of diabetes and hyperglycaemia in surgical patients is rising and associated not only with greater complication rates, length of stay, morbidity and mortality rates, but also increased hospital costs and readmission rates. Due to the complex interaction of organs involved in glucose homeostasis (e.g. liver, pancreas) and the frequent need for nutrition support, patients undergoing major abdominal surgery are particularly prone to develop dysglycaemia. While there are guidelines for perioperative glucose management, implementation is challenging and inconsistent. Main reasons are lack of resources, clinical inertia based on fear of hypoglycaemia and multiple handovers between teams.

Closed-loop glucose control represents an emerging diabetes treatment modality that autonomously adjusts insulin delivery according to continuously measured glucose levels. The use of fully automated closed-loop insulin delivery may represent an easy-to-adopt approach for safe and effective perioperative diabetes management. In previous work, the investigators demonstrated that fully closed-loop insulin delivery in adults with type 2 diabetes undergoing various elective surgeries (abdominal, vascular, neurologic, orthopaedic, thoracic) improved glycaemic control by increasing time spent in the glycaemic target range, lowering mean sensor glucose and glycaemic variability without increasing the risk of hypoglycaemia.

In this follow-up trial the investigators will focus on patients undergoing major elective abdominal surgery to further explore the potential of the fully automated closed-loop approach to accommodate the complex needs of this population. Involvement of a second study centre and hospital staff for device management will further allow to assess the usability of the fully closed-loop system for larger multi-centre clinical trials as well as readiness to use the approach in usual clinical care.

Enrollment

38 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age 18 years or over
  • Pre-existing or anticipated (surgery-induced) diabetes other than type 1 diabetes
  • Expected to require insulin treatment in the perioperative period
  • Planned for elective major abdominal surgery at the University Hospital Bern or Basel expected to last ≥ 90 minutes, defined as colorectal, pancreatic, gastric (except bariatric surgery) and hepatic (≥ 2 segments) surgery

Exclusion criteria

  • Physical or psychological condition likely to interfere with the normal conduct of the study and interpretation of the study results as judged by the investigator
  • Likely discharge earlier than 72 hours
  • Known or suspected allergy to insulin used in this clinical trial
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Pregnancy, planned pregnancy, or breast feeding
  • Lack of safe contraception for female participants of childbearing potential for the entire study duration (medically reliable method of contraception are considered oral, injectable, or implantable contraceptives, intrauterine contraceptive devices, or any other methods judged as sufficiently reliable by the investigator in individual cases).
  • Medically documented allergy towards the adhesive (glue) of plasters or unable tolerate tape adhesive in the area of sensor placement
  • Serious skin diseases located at places of the body, which potentially are possible to be used for localisation of the glucose sensor
  • Illicit drug abuse or prescription drug abuse
  • Incapacity to give informed consent
  • Not willingness to wear study devices 24/7
  • Not literate in German

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

38 participants in 2 patient groups

Closed-loop insulin therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention: Use of a fully-automated closed-loop insulin delivery system from day of admission until hospital discharge (or maximum 20 days).
Treatment:
Device: CamAPS HX
Standard insulin therapy
Active Comparator group
Description:
The control group will receive insulin therapy in accordance with local practice. The insulin regimen during the study period may involve subcutaneous and/or insulin intravenous insulin administration. The modality of insulin treatment, dose adjustment and frequency of glucose monitoring will be at the discretion of the clinical team. No active treatment optimisation will be undertaken by the study team. Participants in the control group will be fitted with the identical study CGM system. The CGM system will be blinded upon hospital admission.
Treatment:
Drug: Standard insulin therapy

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Lia Bally, MD PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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