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The Efficacy and Safety of Faster Insulin Aspart (Fiasp®) Compared to Conventional Insulin Aspart (NovoLog®) as Correction Bolus (PLATEAU)

M

Mountain Diabetes and Endocrine Center

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

Treatments

Drug: Faster Insulin Aspart (Fiasp®)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04414579
GPP2019

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this investigator-initiated trial is to compare the efficacy in terms of time to recovery from hyperglycemia as measured by time to arrest of hyperglycemic excursion ("glucose plateau point", primary endpoint) and return to premeal glucose target if feasible (secondary endpoint) between Fiasp and conventional insulin aspart when used as a correction bolus. These endpoints will be determined by CGM (Dexcom) from data exported from the Dexcom Clarity program.

Full description

Patients with type 1 DM using CSII require bolus insulin for two purposes: first, to cover carbohydrate intake to control postprandial glucose, and second, to correct episodes of hyperglycemia. The latter function is referred to as a "correction dose" or "correction bolus". Insulin pumps have bolus calculators which calculate correction doses based on the patient's individualized BG target and insulin sensitivity factor (ISF). Rapid-acting insulin analogues delivered by pump typically require 2 to 4 hours to fully correct an acute hyperglycemic episode, and sometimes multiple correction doses are needed to normalize the blood glucose level. This can be frustrating for patients, particularly when a correction bolus is necessary in addition to a meal bolus; frequently, patients must wait for the correction bolus to take effect and delay eating until the blood glucose has begun to normalize to avoid severe postprandial hyperglycemia. There is consequently an unmet need in insulin delivery, and in particular in CSII, for an insulin which can correct a hyperglycemic episode more rapidly than is currently possible with rapid-acting insulin analogues.

Faster insulin aspart (Fiasp) is a novel formulation of insulin aspart with an accelerated time-action profile which results in twice the exposure to insulin and 74% greater insulin action within the first 30 minutes after injection compared to conventional insulin aspart. This results in twice-as-fast onset of appearance in the bloodstream (4 vs. 9 min compared to conventional insulin aspart) which has been demonstrated to reduce postprandial glucose levels in patients with type 1 DM using CSII. Theoretically, this faster insulin action would be useful in correction dosing during acute episodes of hyperglycemia to normalize the blood glucose level more rapidly than is currently possible with conventional insulin aspart (NovoLog).

Many patients with type 1 DM using CSII now also use continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) for making insulin dosing decisions. Currently the FDA has approved 2 CGM systems for nonadjunctive use in bolus insulin dose calculations. Only one of these systems, the Dexcom, reads continuously to the patient and has alarms to warn of impending episodes of hyper- or hypoglycemia, and this is the system used most commonly by patients with type 1 DM using open-loop CSII. Patients now incorporate the Dexcom trend arrow, which depicts the rate and direction of glucose change, into the correction dose calculation, and recommendations on how to incorporate CGM information into correction dose calculations have recently been updated based on an expert consensus report. However, these guidelines were created for use with rapid acting insulin analogues. How they might need to be modified for use with Fiasp (the first and only ultra-rapid insulin analogue) is not known.

The purpose of this investigator-initiated trial is to compare the efficacy in terms of time to recovery from hyperglycemia as measured by time to arrest of hyperglycemic excursion ("glucose plateau point", primary endpoint) and return to premeal glucose target if feasible (secondary endpoint) between Fiasp and conventional insulin aspart when used as a correction bolus. These endpoints will be determined by CGM (Dexcom) from data exported from the Dexcom Clarity program.

Study hypothesis:

Compared to conventional insulin aspart, Fiasp will correct hyperglycemia (defined as arrest of rise of blood glucose, following correction bolus, ie, GPP ) faster than conventional insulin aspart in subjects with type 1 DM using CSII.

Enrollment

45 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male and female patients > 18 years of age
  • Type 1 DM of > 1 year duration
  • Use of any open loop insulin pump, Tandem T-Slim with Basal IQ, Insulet Omnipod Dash, or any other investigator-approved insulin pumps with Dexcom CGM G5, G6, or newer version for > 6 months
  • Good baseline glycemic control (HbA1c < 7.5%; low risk of hypoglycemia by CGM as defined by Dexcom Clarity report)
  • No episodes of severe hypoglycemia in the previous 3 months
  • Pump download shows regular meal bolusing, accurate carbohydrate counting ability, and willingness to use exercise markers in Dexcom
  • CGM download shows regular use (>85% of time) and regular calibration if using G5 sensor (G6 requires no calibration)
  • Females using adequate contraception

Exclusion criteria

  • Use of CGM other than Dexcom G5 or G6 or a newer Dexcom CGM version
  • Suboptimal baseline glycemic control (HbA1c > 7.5%)
  • Pump or CGM download shows suboptimal use of devices (lack of meal boluses, frequent overrides of pump, excessive pump suspension, inadequate calibration or inconsistent usage of CGM)
  • Serious comorbidities including CVD with recent event, actively treated malignancy, renal dysfunction with eGFR < 45 ml/min, or any other condition which in the opinion of the investigator would preclude subject's ability to participate in trial
  • Females unwilling to use contraception, planning pregnancy or breastfeeding
  • Use of any other glucose-lowering agents than insulin
  • Hypersensitivity to insulin aspart or one of the excipients in faster insulin aspart
  • Known diabetic gastroparesis

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

45 participants in 2 patient groups

No Intervention: Conventional Insulin Aspart (NovoLog®)
No Intervention group
Description:
In the aspart group, the subject will only take aspart through the their pump. This study population will have an established expertise in diabetes self-management with previous knowledge of insulin pump therapy and Dexcom Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM). Allowing the subjects to use their insulin pumps for bolus insulin delivery, as they are accustomed, will minimize the chances of skipping meal boluses and correction doses. Aspart is put into their pump and delivered to their body through a small tube placed under your skin. In this NovoLog®-only treatment group, the subject will take aspart with each meal while your pump also gives you a slow, continuous dose of aspart for basal insulin. This treatment group is very similar (or even identical) to the treatment the subject was receiving prior to starting the study.
Faster Insulin Aspart (Fiasp®)
Active Comparator group
Description:
In the Fiasp group, the subject will only take aspart through the their pump. This study population will have an established expertise in diabetes self-management with previous knowledge of insulin pump therapy and Dexcom Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM). Allowing the subjects to use their insulin pumps for bolus insulin delivery, as they are accustomed, will minimize the chances of skipping meal boluses and correction doses. Fiasp is put into their pump and delivered to their body through a small tube placed under their skin. In this Fiasp treatment group, the subject will take fiasp with each meal while their pump also gives them a slow, continuous dose of aspart for basal insulin. This treatment group is very similar (or even identical) to the treatment the subject was receiving prior to starting the study.
Treatment:
Drug: Faster Insulin Aspart (Fiasp®)

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Wendy S Lane, MD; Melinda L Buford, RN, BSN

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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