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SITAgliptin Plus GLARgine to Glycemic Control in the Hospital Setting (SITAGLAR-H)

H

Hospital de Especialidades, Centro Medico Nacional "La Raza", Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 4

Conditions

Type 2 Diabetes

Treatments

Drug: Lispro
Drug: Sitagliptin 100mg
Drug: Glargine

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05579119
R-2021-3501-078

Details and patient eligibility

About

In noncritically hospitalized patients, hyperglycemia (defined as blood glucose [BG] levels >140 mg/dL) is a common, serious, and costly healthcare problem. On the other hand, the treatment of hyperglycemia is associated with decreased mortality and morbidity. Therefore, clinical guidelines from professional organizations recommend using subcutaneous insulin as the preferred therapy in hospitalized patients in a non-intensive care unit setting (target glucose range 100 - 180 mg/dl). The most recommended regimen is basal-bolus insulin therapy, although this regimen requires multiple daily insulin injections and is associated with a significant risk of hypoglycemia (reported in up to 32%). Thus, a more straightforward regimen that results in similar glycemic efficacy to basal-bolus insulin with less risk of hypoglycemia could improve care for this group of patients.

The basal-plus insulin regimen consists of a daily dose of basal insulin with supplemental (corrective) doses of rapid-acting insulin analogue before meals. This has similar efficacy and safety as the basal-bolus regimen. However, the basal-plus scheme does not provide prandial coverage of insulin.

In another vein, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors are a class of oral glucose-lowering agents that reduce the breakdown of endogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), stimulating insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent manner. Some clinical trials have demonstrated that DPP-4 inhibitors, in combination with insulin, result in similar improvement in glycemic control and lower rates of hypoglycemia compared to basal-bolus insulin regimens.

For the above, using a long-acting insulin analogue with a DPP-4 inhibitor could provide better glycemic control basal and prandial, and this scheme could represent an alternative to using a basal-plus regimen alone.

In the present study, the investigators will conduct a prospective randomized clinical trial (RCT) to compare the DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, combined with basal-plus insulin therapy and basal-plus insulin scheme alone in non-critical hospitalized patients.

Full description

Patients with a known history of diabetes will be randomized to receive sitagliptin plus basal (glargine) insulin or a basal-plus regimen with glargine. Both groups will receive correction doses of rapid-acting insulin lispro in the presence of hyperglycemia (BG >180 mg/dL) per sliding scale. The overall hypothesis is that treatment with sitagliptin in combination with basal insulin will result in better glycemic control and a lower frequency of hypoglycemic events than treatment with a basal-plus insulin regimen in patients with type 2 diabetes in the hospital setting.

68 subjects with type 2 diabetes will be recruited for this study.

Enrollment

76 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Males or female medical non-ICU patients aged 18 - 70 years.
  2. A known history of type 2 diabetes > 3 months, receiving either diet alone, oral antidiabetic agents (excluding DPP4 inhibitors), or low-dose (≤ 0.5 units/kg/day) insulin therapy.
  3. Subjects with BG >180 mg and < 400 mg/dL at the time of randomization without laboratory evidence of diabetic ketoacidosis (serum bicarbonate < 18 mEq/L or positive serum or urinary ketones).
  4. Written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Age < 18 or > 70 years.
  2. Subjects with increased BG concentration but without a history of diabetes (stress hyperglycemia).
  3. Subjects with a history of type 1 diabetes.
  4. Patients with a history of diabetic ketoacidosis or hyperosmolar state.
  5. Acute critical illness or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is expected to require admission to a critical care unit.
  6. Subjects with gastrointestinal obstruction, adynamic ileus, or those expected to require gastrointestinal suction.
  7. Unable to take oral food or medications.
  8. Patients with clinically relevant pancreatic or gallbladder disease.
  9. Patients with significant hepatic disease (Child-Pugh score B or C) or impaired renal function (GFR < 50 ml/min).
  10. Treatment with oral or injectable corticosteroid.
  11. Mental condition renders the subject unable to understand the study's nature, scope, and possible consequences.
  12. Female subjects are pregnant or breastfeeding at the time of enrollment into the study.
  13. Hypersensitivity to sitagliptin or another contraindication to DPP4 inhibitors.
  14. Subject unable to give informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

76 participants in 2 patient groups

Sitagliptin + glargine
Experimental group
Description:
Sitagliptin and glargine once daily + correction doses of lispro if needed.
Treatment:
Drug: Glargine
Drug: Sitagliptin 100mg
Drug: Lispro
Basal-plus
Active Comparator group
Description:
Glargine once daily plus correction doses of lispro if needed.
Treatment:
Drug: Glargine
Drug: Lispro

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Eduardo Osiris Madrigal-Santillán, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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