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Secondary Care - Continuous Glucose Monitoring (SC-COSMO)

C

Croatian Society for Endocrinology and Diabology

Status

Completed

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Treatments

Device: continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) iPro™2 Medtronic

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT03487887
Program CGM u bolesnika T2DM

Details and patient eligibility

About

Introduction and objective: The current state of glucose monitoring includes the use of A1C, self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG), and continuous glucose monitoring (CGM). CGM technology has got the potential to revolutionize diabetes care in the near future striving to optimal diabetes management and tight glucose control. Until very recently, this determination could only be achieved by the attainment of multiple capillary blood glucose determinations each day and/or measuring hemoglobin A1C. Those methods are not accurate in cases of unrecognized hypoglycemia, unrecognized nighttime events or in cases of large swings in blood glucose. Our aim is to analyze the benefit of tracking patterns of glucose values by using professional CGM technology used for "blinded" collection of glucose data retrospectively in patients with T2DM in secondary care- diabetologist clinic.

Full description

STUDY DESIGN: An observational, multicenter, cross-sectional study. A total of 20 diabetologist from four Croatian regions will recruit up to ten subjects of both sexes from May 2018 till the end of May 2019, diagnosed with type 2 diabetes mellitus at least one year prior to study entry, aged ≥40 years, with only basal insulin in therapy and with clinical suspicion of hypoglycemia or with disproportion in actual glycaemia and hemoglobin A1c findings. Sociodemographic, laboratory (HbA1c, fasting and postprandial glucose, total cholesterol, and high density cholesterol, and low density cholesterol, triglyceride and serum creatinine) and habits data will be collected.

SETTING: Totally 100 of patients will be included. At diabetologist office each patient wear the device (iPro™2 Medtronic) subcutaneously for up to 7-days and return it to the office for download. Patients only see the CGM data after it's been analyzed by the healthcare professional. A CGM device is to be set and take off by the diabetologist. Before the study start all diabetologist who are not familiar to the method will have a short education. Study period is seven days and includes screening before study entry and two visits. On Day 1, after screening and signing the informed consent, the CGM device is applied. Patient is instructed to keep a 7 day diary with four daily standard SMBG along with the data on eating, physical exercise, drugs. On Day 7, CGM device is taken off and the data from iPro2 is uploaded to PC. At the end, each patient fills a short query on satisfaction while wearing CGM.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 8 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • T2DM diagnosed at least one year prior to study entry
  • Only basal insulin in therapy
  • Patients' ability to understand and answer the questionnaire by themselves
  • Signed informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Known coagulopathy
  • Oral anticoagulants in therapy
  • Skin disease that enables continuous glucose monitor device application
  • Febrile illness
  • Patient's inability to physically visit a general practitioners office
  • Patient's inability to answer the questionnaire by themselves

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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