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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00377117
Other study ID # R-05-470
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date May 2006
Est. completion date July 2007

Study information

Verified date November 2018
Source Lawson Health Research Institute
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to learn more about the relationship between serious mental illness and the detection and management of diabetes and pre-diabetic conditions. Patients who have been diagnosed with schizophrenia are at an increased risk for developing diabetes and pre-diabetic conditions such as impaired glucose tolerance and impaired fasting glucose. In addition, novel antipsychotics have also been linked to impaired glucose metabolism and increased incidence of diabetes. The medical management of these patients may be difficult ot achieve through standard family practice. The objectives of this project are to: screen a sample of this high-risk population using an Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT), and to provide multidisciplinary team support to those identified as having diabetes or a pre-diabetic condition.


Description:

Many studies suggest that the extensive psychiatric needs of some patients could take attention away from management of other health problems and from the usual health promotion services physicians provide. Studies suggest that medical comorbidity has often been under recognized and under diagnosed in psychiatric patients, especially among those with schizophrenia. Unrecognized physical diseases are often associated with serious, potentially fatal illness, and may exacerbate the symptoms of psychiatric illness.

The disorder of schizophrenia has been repeatedly associated with a higher than normal incidence of medical illnesses- specifically, diabetes mellitus (DM). The prevalence of DM in a retrospective study of 95 chronic schizophrenic patients was found to be 15.8% - 4 to 5 times higher than that reported in epidemiological surveys in the general population. This increased risk has recently been formally recognized in the Canadian diabetes practice guidelines. In addition, the first line treatment of schizophrenia as per many published clinical practice algorithms, novel antipsychotics (NAP), has been associated independently with increased risk for diabetes. Novel antipsychotics such as clozapine, olanzapine, quetiapine, and risperidone have demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of schizophrenia with generally fewer extrapyramidal side effects than high dosed typical neuroleptics. However, there is accumulating data suggesting that treatment with at least some of the NAPs may be associated with the development of DM and associated risk factors. The use of olanzapine, for example, has been associated with weight gain, exacerbation of previously well-controlled diabetes, and onset of type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Clozapine has also been associated with weight gain in several reports, as well as increased risk of developing diabetes, and at least one report citing deaths from diabetic ketoacidosis after long-term use.

High-risk groups need targeted diabetes strategies. The Canadian diabetes practice guidelines outline that the service model needed to achieve the benchmarks set for diabetes care will need to be designed to reflect the unique diabetes related challenges faced by various segments of the diabetes epidemic. Diabetes care should be organized around a multidisciplinary diabetes healthcare (DHC) team that can establish and sustain a communication network between the person with DM and the necessary healthcare and community systems. The high risk mental health communities in Ontario need a targeted primary health care service delivery model that attends to the unique set of diabetes related challenges they face, including: weight increase related to medication use, inadequate self-care resources and capacity related to poverty, social constraints and lack of supports, communication barriers and mental health symptomology impacting interactions with service providers.

Current guidelines for diabetes management are clear regarding the monitoring and treatment of identified high-risk groups. Screening for DM should be performed every three years in individuals over 40 years of age. However, more frequent and/or earlier testing with a 75-g Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) should be considered in people with identified risk factors such as schizophrenia and NAP use. Annual screening could detect individuals with undiagnosed DM as well as individuals with the pre-diabetic conditions of Impaired Fasting Glucose and Impaired Glucose Tolerance. Results of large, well-designed studies assessing early interventions in adults to prevent the progression from pre-diabetic conditions to DM have recently been published. These studies have demonstrated significant risk reduction with lifestyle management and appropriate pharmacologic interventions. It is also well documented that a comprehensive multidisciplinary Diabetes Healthcare team can help slow the progression of the disease and reduce the incidence of DM-related complications for those already diagnosed with DM.

The London Intercommunity Health Centre (LIHC) has recently piloted a diabetes program addressing the needs of a high-risk mental health population within the recommended guidelines. The program was designed as a "one stop shop" for self-management teaching, medication and glucose monitoring, and referral to specialist providers as needed. The structure of the program followed the Canadian Diabetes Association Clinical Practice Guidelines. Although the program has yet to be implemented long enough to determine if the progression from pre-diabetes to diabetes was prevented, pre-diabetic patients involved in the program have demonstrate clinically significant improvement in lipid profiles and blood pressure measurements. Those patients diagnosed with DM, who participated in the program, were found to attend regularly, and demonstrated a clinically significant improvement in their metabolic control. Thus, initial results from the LIHC, and a recent extension of this model into a community population, indicate that this model of diabetes care for this high-risk mental health population is promising for diabetes risk and disease management.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 39
Est. completion date July 2007
Est. primary completion date
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 75 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Patients active in current Regional Mental Health Care London, Specialized Adult London Ambulatory Care and Assertive Community Treatment programs with known diagnosis of a Psychotic Disorder and/or use of Novel Antipsychotics.

- Must have family physician contact and ability to consent to medical care.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Any patient with declaration on file stating incapable of consenting to medical treatment.

Study Design


Intervention

Procedure:
Management

Screening


Locations

Country Name City State
Canada Regional Mental Health Care London London Ontario

Sponsors (3)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Lawson Health Research Institute Eli Lilly and Company, St. Joseph's Health Care London

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Canada, 

References & Publications (3)

Brown JB, Lent B, Stirling A, Takhar J, Bishop J. Caring for seriously mentally ill patients. Qualitative study of family physicians' experiences. Can Fam Physician. 2002 May;48:915-20. — View Citation

Crews C, Batal H, Elasy T, Casper E, Mehler PS. Primary care for those with severe and persistent mental illness. West J Med. 1998 Oct;169(4):245-50. — View Citation

Kushner K, Diamond R, Beasley JW, Mundt M, Plane MB, Robbins K. Primary care physicians' experience with mental health consultation. Psychiatr Serv. 2001 Jun;52(6):838-40. — View Citation

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