Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trial
— APCam08Official title:
An Open-label, Three-centre, Randomised, Two-period, Crossover Study to Assess the Efficacy, Safety and Utility of Overnight Closed-loop in Comparison With CGM Alone in the Home Setting in Children and Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes
Verified date | February 2017 |
Source | University of Cambridge |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is one of the most common chronic childhood diseases requiring
lifelong insulin therapy. Children and adolescents with T1D need regular insulin injections
or the continuous insulin delivery using an insulin pump in order to keep blood glucose
levels normal. We know that keeping blood sugars in the normal range will help prevent
longterm diabetes-related complications involving the eyes, kidneys and heart. However,
achieving treatment goals can be very difficult as the tighter we try to control blood
glucose levels, the greater the risk to develop symptoms and signs of low glucose levels
(hypoglycaemia). This is a particular problem at night and one solution is to develop a
system whereby the amount of insulin injected is controlled by a computer and is very
closely matched to the blood sugar levels on a continuous basis. This can be achieved by
what is known as a "closed-loop system" where a small glucose sensor placed under the skin
communicates with a computer containing an algorithm that drives an insulin pump. We have
been testing such a system in Cambridge over the last five years in children and have found
that this system is effective at maintaining tight glucose control and preventing nocturnal
hypoglycaemia. More recently the system has been tested in real life conditions in the home
setting for three weeks during a pilot single-centre study.
The next step is to extend the evaluation of closed-loop over a prolonged period of three
months. In the present study we are planning to study 24 young people aged 6-18 years on
insulin pump therapy. During three months glucose will be controlled by the computer and
during the other three months the subjects will make their own adjustments to the insulin
therapy using real-time continuous glucose monitoring.
We aim to determine the effect of the computer algorithm in keeping glucose levels between
3.9 and 8 mmol/L (normal levels). Safety evaluation comprises assessment of the frequency of
severe hypoglycaemic episodes. Participants' response to the use of the system in terms of
lifestyle change, daily diabetes management and fear of hypoglycaemia will be assessed. We
will also test for longer term glucose control by measuring glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 29 |
Est. completion date | May 2015 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 6 Years to 18 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - The subject is between 6 and 18 years of age (inclusive) - The subject has type 1 diabetes, as defined by WHO for at least 1 year or is confirmed C-peptide negative - The subject will have been an insulin pump user for at least 3 months, with good knowledge of insulin self-adjustment as judged by the investigator - The subject is willing to perform regular finger-prick blood glucose monitoring, with at least 4 blood glucose measurements taken every day - HbA1c = 10 % based on analysis from central laboratory or equivalent - The subject is literate in English Exclusion Criteria: - Non-type 1 diabetes mellitus including those secondary to chronic disease - Untreated celiac disease - Any other physical or psychological disease likely to interfere with the normal conduct of the study and interpretation of the study results as judged by the investigator - Current treatment with drugs known to interfere with glucose metabolism, e.g. systemic corticosteroids, non-selective beta-blockers and MAO inhibitors etc. - Known or suspected allergy against insulin - Subjects with clinical significant nephropathy, neuropathy or proliferative retinopathy as judged by the investigator - Total daily insulin dose = 2 IU/kg/day - Total daily insulin dose < 10 IU/day - Pregnancy, planned pregnancy, or breast feeding - Severe visual impairment - Severe hearing impairment - Subjects using implanted internal pace-maker |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | University of Cambridge | Cambridge | |
United Kingdom | Leeds Teaching Hospitals | Leeds | |
United Kingdom | University College London Hospital | London |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Cambridge | Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, University College London Hospitals |
United Kingdom,
Elleri D, Allen JM, Biagioni M, Kumareswaran K, Leelarathna L, Caldwell K, Nodale M, Wilinska ME, Acerini CL, Dunger DB, Hovorka R. Evaluation of a portable ambulatory prototype for automated overnight closed-loop insulin delivery in young people with type 1 diabetes. Pediatr Diabetes. 2012 Sep;13(6):449-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1399-5448.2012.00903.x. — View Citation
Hovorka R, Allen JM, Elleri D, Chassin LJ, Harris J, Xing D, Kollman C, Hovorka T, Larsen AM, Nodale M, De Palma A, Wilinska ME, Acerini CL, Dunger DB. Manual closed-loop insulin delivery in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes: a phase 2 randomised crossover trial. Lancet. 2010 Feb 27;375(9716):743-51. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(09)61998-X. — View Citation
Hovorka R, Kumareswaran K, Harris J, Allen JM, Elleri D, Xing D, Kollman C, Nodale M, Murphy HR, Dunger DB, Amiel SA, Heller SR, Wilinska ME, Evans ML. Overnight closed loop insulin delivery (artificial pancreas) in adults with type 1 diabetes: crossover randomised controlled studies. BMJ. 2011 Apr 13;342:d1855. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d1855. — View Citation
Kumareswaran K, Elleri D, Allen JM, Harris J, Xing D, Kollman C, Nodale M, Murphy HR, Amiel SA, Heller SR, Wilinska ME, Acerini CL, Evans ML, Dunger DB, Hovorka R. Meta-analysis of overnight closed-loop randomized studies in children and adults with type 1 diabetes: the Cambridge cohort. J Diabetes Sci Technol. 2011 Nov 1;5(6):1352-62. — View Citation
Thabit H, Tauschmann M, Allen JM, Leelarathna L, Hartnell S, Wilinska ME, Acerini CL, Dellweg S, Benesch C, Heinemann L, Mader JK, Holzer M, Kojzar H, Exall J, Yong J, Pichierri J, Barnard KD, Kollman C, Cheng P, Hindmarsh PC, Campbell FM, Arnolds S, Pieb — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Safety evaluation | Safety evaluation will comprise number of episodes of severe hypoglycaemia as well as the number of subjects experiencing severe hypoglycaemia and other adverse events, including ketone-positive hyperglycaemia. Subjects will be asked to measure blood or urine ketone levels on waking in the morning if their finger prick glucose is above 14mmol/l, as part of the safety evaluation for hyperglycaemia. | 3 month home study period | |
Other | Utility Evaluation | Utility evaluation is the frequency and duration of use of the closed-loop system combined with CGM as compared to the use of real time CGM alone, and the subjects' response in terms of life-style change, daily diabetes management and fear of hypoglycaemia, as evaluated by questionnaires and a semi-structured qualitative interview. | 3 month home study period | |
Primary | Time spent overnight in the target glucose range (3.9 to 8.0 mmol/l), as assessed by adjusted continuous subcutaneous glucose monitoring (CGM) | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | The proportion of nights when glucose levels drop below 3.5 mmol/l for 20 minutes or longer, as recorded by CGM | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Time spent above and below the target glucose (3.9 to 8.0 mmol/l) based on CGM. | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | The time with glucose levels in the significant hyperglycaemia range (glucose levels > 16.7 mmol/l) as recorded by CGM | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Metabolic control assessed by HbA1c | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Average and standard deviation of glucose levels, as recorded by CGM | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | The time with glucose levels < 3.5 mmol/l as recorded by CGM. | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | The time with glucose levels in the widened target range, as recorded by CGM (glucose levels = 3.9mmol/l to = 10.0mmol/l ) | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Low Blood Glucose Index (LBGI), as recorded by CGM. | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Standard deviation of the glucose rate of change, as recorded by CGM. | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Overnight insulin dose | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Total daily insulin dose | 3 month home study period | ||
Secondary | Episodes of symptomatic hypoglycaemia | 3 month home study period |
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