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The goal of this clinical trial is to evaluate the intervention effects on blood sugar levels using an AI diet app for personalized meal control and the continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) in patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D)
The main questions it aims to answer are:
2 Effect of blood sugar management intervention using AI diet app
◎ Research method
<study arms>
This study's aim is to identify dietary factors for each patient that can affect blood sugar control based on the Continuous Glucose Monitoring System (CGMS) in patients with T2D and to personalize the amount and type of meal intake. It is planned to confirm the effect of blood sugar control intervention through a nutrition counseling coaching system.
The sex-stratified random assignment method was used to recruit 20, 30, and 30 study participants in the control group (negative), control group (positive), and intervention group, respectively. Namely, each study group is allocated according to the endocrinology department visiting patients, so the ratio of participants by gender is similarly allocated.
The group allocation of subjects uses a double-blind method in which a researcher who is not at all related to research planning, analysis, and interpretation of results assigns subjects according to random sampling numbers.
Full description
This study aims to identify patient-specific dietary factors that can affect blood sugar control based on the continuous glucose monitoring system (CGMS) in T2D patients and to personalize the amount and type of meal intake.
[Research method]
<study arms>
The sex-stratified random assignment method was used to recruit 20, 30, and 30 study participants in the control group (negative), control group (positive), and intervention group, respectively. Namely, each study group is allocated according to the endocrinology department visiting patients, so the ratio of participants by gender is similarly allocated.
The group allocation of subjects uses a double-blind method in which a researcher who is not at all related to research planning, analysis, and interpretation of results assigns subjects according to random sampling numbers.
[Research design]
Parallel design with three arms
◎ Effect evaluation criteria
< Data items to be collected >
(1) Surveys three times*
Demographic information: abbreviation of name, gender, date of birth, occupation, education, income, marital status, number of children, female history (menopause, uterine/ovarian removal)
Disease history*: comorbidities, complications, antidiabetic drugs, duration of illness
Nutrition practices*: Number of meals/days, whether or not to eat out, dining out location, main food intake
Lifestyle*: sleep, smoking, alcohol consumption, exercise, physical activity
Diabetes Self-Management Activities*: Execute meal plan, exercise, blood sugar test, diabetes medication, foot care (In the case of *, it is conducted at the beginning, after 12 weeks, and at the end.)
<Consideration of safety for research participants>
Basic procedures to secure research ethics
This study complies with the Declaration of Helsinki and ICH-GCP and will be conducted after IRB approval.
Personal information plan for research subjects
Personal information that can be collected in this study includes name, initials, sex, year of birth, contact information, and account number.
Personal information is used for research through deletion or anonymization and is only accessible to authorized researchers.
Individual identification through the use of the data built up is impossible, and the information obtained from the research will not be used for purposes other than confirming or researching the occurrence of diseases in the future.
<Research participant incentives>
Negative control group: 40,000 won for clinical participation Positive control group: 60,000 won for clinical participation Intervention group: 100,000 won for clinical participation
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
(Among outpatients between 18 and 69 years old who can continue to participate for six months)
Exclusion criteria
Criteria for suspension and elimination
Dropout Prevention Measures The dropout rate is expected to increase in the order of negative control group < positive control group < intervention group. In general, the dropout rate when selecting subjects in clinical trials is about 10% to 15%, but the dropout rate of subjects in this study is as high as 16.7%. Therefore, in order to prevent the dropout of the intervention group, which is expected to have the highest dropout rate, real-time monitoring is conducted on the collected blood glucose data. We are going to prevent the dropout as much as possible by proceeding in the direction of encouraging the target.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
96 participants in 3 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Sang-ah Lee, PhD; Eunhee Cho, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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