Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Randomized, Three-way, Crossover Study to Assess the Efficacy of Fast-acting Insulin-plus-pramlintide Closed-loop Co-administration, Regular Insulin-plus-pramlintide Closed-loop Co-administration, and Fast-acting Insulin-alone Closed-loop Infusion in Regulating Glucose Levels Over a 24-hour Period in Adults With Type 1 Diabetes in Inpatient Settings.
The closed-loop delivery system is composed of an insulin pump, a continuous glucose sensor
and a dosing algorithm that calculates the insulin dose to infuse based on sensor readings.
Pramlintide is a drug and an analog of amylin, a hormone that is co-secreted with insulin in
healthy individuals, and is deficient in people with type 1 diabetes. Co-injection of
pramlintide with insulin at meal times improves glucose control in type 1 diabetes.
Literature data suggests that regular insulin may better match the effect of pramlintide
compared to rapid insulin in regulating post-prandial glucose levels.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of 3 strategies to control your
day-and-night glucose levels:
1. rapid insulin-alone closed-loop delivery;
2. rapid insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery;
3. regular insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery.
The primary hypotheses are:
1. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and
fast-acting insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone
infusion.
2. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and
regular insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.
The closed-loop delivery system is composed of an insulin pump, a continuous glucose sensor
and a dosing algorithm that calculates the insulin dose to infuse based on sensor readings.
Pramlintide is a drug and an analog of amylin, a hormone that is co-secreted with insulin in
healthy individuals, and is deficient in people with type 1 diabetes. Co-injection of
pramlintide with insulin at meal times improves glucose control in type 1 diabetes.
Literature data suggests that the pharmacodynamics of regular insulin may better match the
effect of pramlintide compared to the pharmacodynamics of fast-acting insulin. Moreover, the
cost of regular insulin is significantly lower than fast-acting insulin. Therefore, if a
similar (or better) glucose profile can be achieved with regular insulin-plus-pramlintide
compared to fast-acting insulin-plus-pramlintide, then a co-formulation employing regular
insulin should be prioritized.
Therefore, in this protocol, we aim to assess the effect of the simultaneous, closed-loop,
basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide with insulin at a fixed ratio in controlling glucose
levels. In the first experimental arm, we propose to infuse pramlintide with fast-acting
insulin. In the second experimental arm, pramlintide will be infused with regular insulin.
The control arm will be fast-acting insulin-alone closed-loop system.
The aim of the study is to assess the efficacy of the simultaneous, closed-loop, basal-bolus
infusion of pramlintide with fast-acting insulin at a fixed ratio and pramlintide with
regular insulin at a fixed ratio in controlling glucose levels compared to fast-acting
insulin-alone closed-loop infusion.
The investigators aim to conduct a randomized, three-way, crossover trial to compare the
efficacy of 1) fast-acting insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery, 2) regular
insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery, and 3) fast-acting insulin-alone closed-loop
delivery in regulating glucose levels over a period of 24 hours in a study on adults in
inpatient settings. Insulin (fast-acting and regular) and pramlintide are given with fixed
ratio (6 µg of pramlintide for each unit of insulin).
Before each 24-hour intervention visit, the participant's insulin therapy (basal rates and
insulin-to-carbohydrate ratios) will be optimized for a minimum of 10 days, with a target of
14 days.
There will be a wash-out period of 0 to 42 days between the three intervention arms
(termination of 24-hr intervention and start of next optimization period).
The primary hypotheses are:
1. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and
fast-acting insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone
infusion.
2. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and
regular insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.
;
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