View clinical trials related to Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of canagliflozin (JNJ-28431754) compared with glimepiride in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus with inadequate control despite treatment with metformin.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the cardiovascular outcomes of alogliptin, once daily (QD), compared with placebo, in addition to standard of care, in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and acute coronary syndrome.
The AIMM Young study is a collaboration between Children's National Medical Center (CNMC) and colleges/universities nationwide--currently including Howard University (HU), East Carolina University (ECU), and University of Massachusetts, Amherst (U Mass). This study obtains a variety of baseline measures (such as serum biomarkers related to metabolic syndrome, anthropometrics, muscle strength, and fitness testing) along with genetic information from healthy college-age (18-35 years) young adults in efforts to identify phenotype-genotype associations that may predispose individuals to developing metabolic syndrome, type 2 diabetes, and/or related diseases such as obesity. We hypothesized that certain genetic variations will be protective against metabolic syndrome, while others will show a strong correlation with specific components of metabolic syndrome disease. We expect that the study of "pre-symptomatic," young individuals will facilitate the identification of genetic risk loci for metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes. Younger populations typically have less confounding variables, and this facilitates normalizing of metabolic syndrome features and environment/lifestyle. Additionally, young subjects can provide more robust longitudinal data, and be recruited into subsequent interventions to reverse the trend towards metabolic syndrome, rather than the more difficult task of reversing type 2 diabetes in older populations. The data collected will be stratified according to gender, age, ethnicity, genotype, and other phenotypic measures to determine how these factors influence disease risk.
This trial was conducted in North America. The aim of this clinical trial was to investigate if two formulations of NN1250 (insulin degludec) have the same level of drug exposure to the body.
The primary objective is to demonstrate the non-inferiority at six months of a basal plus one insulin regimen (Lantus plus one injection of Apidra) compared with a biphasic insulin regimen (NovoMix 30) at controlling glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c) in type 2 diabetes. The secondary objective are: - To compare the proportion of patients in each treatment group reaching HbA1c target (< 7%) at the end of the treatment period - To compare the rates of hypoglycaemia (total, severe, nocturnal) - To compare the change in body weight from visit 10 to visit 24 - To compare the change in diabetes specific quality of life and other patient reported outcomes from visit 10 to visit 24 - Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire - status and change (DTSQs+c) - Audit of Diabetes-Dependent Quality of Life (ADDQoL) questionnaire - Insulin Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire (ITSQ) - EuroQoL 5 Dimensions (EQ5D) questionnaire - To record the change in the daily dose of insulin from visit 2 to visit 10 and visit 10 to visit 24
This trial is conducted in Europe. The aim is to compare changes in blood sugar and the number of periods where carbohydrate supplementation is needed to treat low blood sugar, during two different treatments with NN1250 (insulin degludec), a soluble insulin basal analogue (SIBA) in subjects with type 1 diabetes.
Primary Objective: To evaluate the efficacy and the safety of insulin glulisine in type I Diabetes Melittus (DM) patients Secondary Objective: To evaluate the insulin glulisine doses To assess the patient satisfaction
This trial is conducted in Europe. The aim of this clinical trial is to investigate the blood glucose lowering effect of NN1250 (insulin degludec) in young and elderly subjects with type 1 diabetes.
This is a phase IV study of 3.5 years duration to evaluate the phenotypic and genetic correlates of diabetes (non-Type 1 in young non-obese Asian Indians in North India and pilot case control study to evaluate the efficacy of sitagliptin (DPP-4 inhibitor) in a sub-group of the study population.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (ie, blood levels of JNJ-28431754) and pharmacodynamics (ie, urine and blood levels of glucose) of JNJ-28431754 compared to placebo in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus.