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This Study is designed to determine whether treatment of CFRD with glargine insulin will improve hemoglobin A1c, weight and muscle mass compared to the traditional regimen of bedtime NPH insulin.
Full description
The majority of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients now survive beyond childhood, and CF related diabetes (CFRD), due to insulin deficiency, is common. CFRD with fasting hyperglycemia occurs in about 15% of adult CF patients. Standard insulin therapy has relied primarily on meal coverage with rapid-acting insulin. Usually, basal insulin coverage is only provided overnight, with modest doses of NPH insulin. The practice of providing minimal basal insulin in CFRD is based on the fact that most of these patients, unless they are acutely ill, are able to maintain relatively normal blood glucose levels during the day without it. In addition, anecdotal experience has suggested that daytime NPH insulin or once to twice daily ultralente insulin frequently lead to hypoglycemia in the CFRD patient. This practice, which is based on practical clinical considerations, ignores the established relationship between insulin deficiency and clinical deterioration in CFRD. BMI and pulmonary function deteriorate much more rapidly in CF patients with diabetes than in CF patients with normal glucose tolerance. Insulin deficiency leads to increased protein catabolism and fatty acid turnover. The resulting loss of weight and lean body mass contributes to pulmonary disease and clinical decline.
We hypothesize that:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria
CFRD with fasting hyperglycemia (fasting plasma glucose ≥126 mg/dl)
. The diagnosis must be made at a time when the patient is in his/her basal state of health with no evidence of acute exacerbation in the preceding two months.
a). Acute exacerbation is defined on page 9.
. For patients with onset of diabetes in the preceding 6 months, the hemoglobin A1c must be stable for 3 months prior to study entrance within 5% (0.3% A1c increment).
Age ≥18, post-pubertal (done growing, since change in weight is a study endpoint)
Weight stable within 5% during the previous 3 months as measured in CF clinic
Willingness to attend all study visits and to engage in regular phone or e-mail contact with the study diabetes nurse
Glucocorticoids can have a profound effect on weight, and thus we wish to minimize the occurrence of changing steroid doses during the study period. Patients receiving glucocorticoid therapy will be included in the protocol only if:
Exclusion Criteria
Pregnancy or plans to become pregnant in the next eight months (because of the changes pregnancy would cause in our study endpoints),
Unwillingness / inability to take multiple injections or to count carbohydrates,
A history of hypoglycemia unawareness (rare in CF),
Plans to start any medication in the next 8 months that might affect weight, such as testosterone or Megace. Patients chronically taking these medications may be included if:
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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