View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:To investigate the effect of food in healthy male volunteers who receive HCP1201 tablet in fed versus fasted condition
This study is conducted in the United States of America (USA). The aim of this study is to assess longitudinal variation of immune biomarkers in subjects with type 1 diabetes (T1D), type 2 diabetes (T2D) and healthy, non-diabetic subjects over a one year period.
The purpose of this proposal is to compare the effectiveness of community health worker (CHW) support vs. usual primary care for helping chronically-ill, low-SES patients to improve control of chronic conditions. Upon enrollment each patient will select one of their multiple chronic conditions as a focus for the trial and work with his/her PCP to set a chronic disease management goal. Patients are then randomized to receive usual primary care vs. CHW support for moving towards that goal.
The purpose of the study is to assess whether an electronic self-management tool, specifically an iPhone application entitled bant, can improve glycemic control in Adolescents who have Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM).
The aim of the study is to investigate the longterm impact on cardiovascular morbidity, mortality and renal function of treatment with linagliptin in a selected population of patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and to compare outcomes against placebo, on a background of standard of care.
BIOTRONIK - SaFety and Performance Registry for a diabetic patient population with the .bimus Eluting Orsiro Stent System Within daily clinical practice - III
This study is conducted in Europe and Asia. The purpose of the study (Diabetes Pregnancy Registry) is to evaluate the safety of treatment with insulin detemir in pregnant women with diabetes mellitus.
American Indians (AIs) living in the Northwest have very high rates of diabetes, obesity, tobacco use, depression, and other risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease. Depression and diabetes have a pernicious effect on CVD risk and susceptibility. This study seeks to build upon the success of the 1-month, 5-session motivational interviewing (MI) CVD prevention component of the həli?dxw Project (aka Healthy Hearts-originally funded under RFA-HL-06-002; U01 HL HL087322-05). həli?dxw successfully culturally adapted MI for CVD prevention for AIs, trained AIs to implement the intervention, and conducted a preliminary feasibility and efficacy trial. Initial results indicated that participants enthusiastically embraced the MI component of the program; however, observations of the counselors, survey data, and feedback from participants suggest that depressive symptomatology served as a barrier to achieving CVD preventive behaviors and desired outcomes; and, that more time and attention to underlying depressive symptomatology may enhance motivation and CVD prevention behaviors, particularly among AIs with pre-diabetes and Type 2 diabetes. Building upon solid preliminary CVD epidemiological data, preliminary acceptability and feasibility of utilizing an MI approach, and motivated by the need to address elevated depression and diabetes profiles from the həli?dxw study, the investigators will develop a 3-month, 10-session MI-based cognitive-behavioral-adherence (MI-CBT-CVD) treatment program to address underlying depressive symptomatology, activate CVD prevention behaviors, and decrease BMI and CVD risk behaviors among 50 pre-and recently diagnosed diabetic AIs at risk for CVD. The study proposes three innovative and significant aims. First, in line with community-based participatory (CBPR) principles and pre-established indigenous research protocols with the tribal community, the investigators will conduct formative research to develop the MI-CBT-CVD intervention. Second, the investigators will conduct a pilot randomized two-group, single-site waitlist-controlled clinical trial of a 10-session, 3-month MI-based cognitive-behavioral treatment for CVD prevention (MI-CBT-CVD) among 50 pre-and recently diagnosed diabetic AI adults with depressive symptomatology and who are also at risk for CVD. Assessments will be conducted at pre and post intervention and at 6-months (3 month follow-up). Third, the investigators will disseminate the findings to the tribe as well as research outlets and prepare an RO1 to conduct a full-scale RCT should the pilot intervention be efficacious, acceptable to the community, and feasible. The primary objectives will be to determine the effect of the proposed culturally-grounded behavioral intervention program on (a) reducing weight as measured by BMI (7-10% reduction in BMI); (b) decreasing depressive symptomatology; (c) increasing physical activity; (d) decreasing sedentary activities; (d) increasing healthful food habits; and (e) improving biomedical outcomes (e.g., blood lipid profiles, glucose, hemoglobin A1C, and blood pressure). The intervention will be culturally relevant and utilize existing Native resources and personnel wherever possible.
This trial is conducted in Asia. The aim of the trial is to investigate the efficacy and safety of biphasic insulin aspart 50 (BIAsp 50) twice daily versus biphasic human insulin 50 (BHI 50) twice daily, both in combination with metformin, in Chinese subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Ubiquitous healthcare service for elderly patients with type 2 diabetes have been developed and improved glycemic control. However, previous U-healthcare service had some limitations, which needs specific devices to check blood glucose and send it to central system. Voice inception technique based U-healthcare service is expected to improve glycemic control without specific devices. To evaluate the clinical efficacy of this system, researchers plan to compare the improvement of glycemic control, self-management, and quality of life between U-health care group (intervention) and conventional treatment group (control).