Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Enrollment for this study is complete.
This study is designed to determine if use of a real-time continuous glucose monitor (RT-CGM) can reverse defective Glucose counter regulation and hypoglycemia unawareness in long standing type 1 diabetes.
Full description
The present protocol is designed to determine whether strict hypoglycemia avoidance by real-time continuous glucose monitoring (RT-CGM), can restore endogenous glucose production in response to hypoglycemia in patients with long standing disease. Twelve subjects with long standing type 1 diabetes complicated by hypoglycemia unawareness underwent assessment of the endogenous glucose production response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia using paired hyperinsulinemic euglycemic and hypoglycemic clamps with stable glucose isotope infusions before and at 6 and 18 months following initiation of RT-CGM. The primary analysis will be change in the endogenous glucose production response from before to 6 months following initiation of RT-CGM, and a secondary analysis will consider the persistence of any change at 18 months. The clinical significance of any determined changes in the endogenous glucose production response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia will be determined by comparison to responses obtained using paired hyperinsulinemic euglycemic and hypoglycemic clamps on one occasion in a matched control group of 12 subjects with long-standing type 1 diabetes but no hypoglycemia unawareness (GROUP 2) and in a matched control group of 12 nondiabetic subjects (GROUP 3).
Arms are not assigned to these two control groups in ct.gov as they were only used as a baseline for clinical significance. Neither group wore a CGM nor are they analyzed at 6-month and 18-month time-points. This said, for control group clarification, inclusion and exclusion criteria for each group is included in ct.gov
Hypoglycemia is a major barrier to the achievement of adequate glycemic control for most patients with insulin-dependent diabetes. Type 1 diabetic patients with absolute insulin deficiency (C-peptide negative) are at greatest risk for experiencing severe hypoglycemic events because the near total destruction of insulin producing islet β-cells produces an associated defect in glucagon secretion from neighboring α-cells. Such patients then depend on the sympathoadrenal system as a final defense against hypoglycemia, but unfortunately, recurrent episodes of hypoglycemia blunt sympathoadrenal activation and produce a syndrome of hypoglycemia unawareness that is associated with a twenty-fold increased risk of life-threatening hypoglycemia. Without intact islet or sympathoadrenal (especially epinephrine) responses to hypoglycemia, these patients cannot increase endogenous (primarily hepatic) glucose production to prevent or correct low blood glucose.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Key Inclusion Criteria for intervention GROUP 1 (Long-standing T1D complicated by hypoglycemia unawareness)
Male and female subjects aged 25 to 70 years
Able to provide written informed consent and to comply with the protocol procedures
Clinical history compatible with type 1 diabetes with disease onset < 40 years of age OR onset ≥ 40 years and documented islet autoimmunity
Insulin-dependent for > 10 years
Absent C-peptide (< 0.3 ng/mL).
Involvement in intensive diabetes management defined as self-monitoring of glucose values no less than a mean of three times each day averaged over each week and by the administration of three or more insulin injections each day or insulin pump therapy under the direction of an endocrinologist, diabetologist, or diabetes specialist with at least 3 clinical evaluations during the previous 12 months.)
Hypoglycemia unawareness manifested by a Clarke score of 4 or more AND at least one of the following:
At least one episode of severe hypoglycemia in the past 12 months defined as an event with symptoms or signs compatible with hypoglycemia in which the subject was unable to treat him/herself and which was associated with either a blood glucose level < 54 mg/dl [3.0 mmol/L] or prompt recovery after oral carbohydrate, intravenous glucose, or glucagon administration; OR documented > 5% time spent in the hypoglycemic range (glucose < 60 mg/dl) by 72-hour blinded CGM.
Key Inclusion Criteria for control GROUP 2 (Long-standing T1D with intact hypoglycemia awareness)
Key Inclusion Criteria for control GROUP 3 (Non-diabetic controls)
Key Exclusion Criteria for ALL 3 groups
Body mass index (BMI) greater than 38 kg/m2.
Insulin requirement of more than 1.0 IU/kg/day.
HbA1c greater than 10%.
Untreated proliferative diabetic retinopathy.
SBP greater than 160 mmHg or DBP greater than 100 mmHg.
Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) less than 55 ml/min/1.73 m-squared
Positive pregnancy test, presently breast-feeding, or unwillingness to use effective contraceptive measures for the duration of the study.
Baseline hemoglobin less than 11 g/dl in women and less than12 g/dl in men.
Severe co-existing cardiac disease
Persistent elevation of liver function tests greater than 1.5 upper normal limits
Hyperlipidemia despite medical therapy
Receiving treatment for a medical condition requiring chronic use of systemic steroids
Presence of a seizure disorder not attributable to hypoglycemia.
Untreated hypothyroidism, Addisons disease, or Celiac disease.
Treatment with any anti-diabetic medication other than insulin within 4 weeks of enrollment.
Use of RT-CGM (continuous glucose monitor) within last 4 weeks.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
37 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal