Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Adolescents and young adults (AYAs; ages 17-23) with type 1 diabetes are at high risk for negative health outcomes, including poor glycemic control and disengagement from the health care system. The deterioration of glycemic control occurs in parallel with the assumption of independent self-care skills and preparation for adult diabetes care. Effective communication between AYAs and health care providers may be a critical contributor to diabetes self-care skills during the transition to adult diabetes care and related glycemic control. This research will attempt to better prepare adolescents and young adults for adult diabetes care by delivering innovative intervention content focused on both health communication skills and transition readiness skills. The investigators aim to leverage innovative technologies to improve developmentally-appropriate communication skills related to planning for clinic visits, disclosing and discussing diabetes-related concerns, and optimizing glucose data review in preparation for adult diabetes care. Adolescents and young adults with type 1 diabetes (ages 17-23) who are planning to transition to adult diabetes care within the next 6-8 months will be enrolled in the study and randomized to either the intervention group or a standard care control group. Medical, communication and psychosocial data (including A1c, glucose monitoring frequency, communication quality, health care engagement, depressive symptoms) will be collected from adolescent and young adult participants and health care providers at baseline and two follow-up time points, approximately 4 months post-baseline and approximately 8-12 months post-baseline after the transfer to adult diabetes care. This intervention has the potential to improve diabetes self-care skills, including engagement with health care providers, and glycemic control in AYAs with type 1 diabetes during the vulnerable period of transfer to adult diabetes care. The results of this work will inform best practices for the transition to adult diabetes care and can be translated into clinical care.


Clinical Trial Description

Research Design and Methods Overview of Study Design & Procedure. The aim of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to determine the efficacy of a behavioral intervention targeting health communication skills and diabetes self-management skills in preparation for the transfer to adult diabetes care, compared to usual care. The intervention, Plan, Reflect, and Engage with Providers for Diabetes Care (PREP-DC), consists of three intervention sessions with a study interventionist, paired text messages, and access to glucose management software. It is expected that adolescents and young adults allocated to the intervention condition (PREP-DC) will evidence: 1) better glycemic control (lower A1c); 2) shorter gap in time between the last visit in pediatric diabetes care and the first visit in adult diabetes care; 3) better diabetes management (better adherence to the diabetes regimen); 4) fewer reported complications (e.g. hospitalizations and emergency department visits). A total of 100 adolescent and young adult participants (ages 17-23) will be randomly allocated in a 1:1 ratio to either the PREP-DC intervention condition (n=50) or usual care (n=50; standard care comparison condition): all participants receive standard resources for transition to adult diabetes care as part of usual care in both conditions. Participants include 100 adolescents and young adults (ages 17-23) diagnosed with T1D for at least one year (anticipated 50% female) seen for diabetes care at Children's National Medical Center (CNMC) in Washington, DC. Eligible participants will self-identify as planning to transfer to adult diabetes care within the upcoming 6-8 months. Participants in the PREP-DC intervention will complete three intervention sessions with study team members over a 3 month period (approximately 1 intervention session per month). Two sessions will be with a trained study interventionist focusing on communication with health care providers and preparation for medical visits and adult diabetes care. One session will be with a certified diabetes education focusing on problem-solving using glucose data and glucose data review. PREP-DC intervention participants will also receive text messages (3-4 messages/week) for the 3 month intervention period supporting intervention content. Participants also will be given information about accessing glucose management software specific to their diabetes devices and related study resources (e.g. study website). Participants are evaluated at baseline (pre-randomization to intervention or standard care comparison group) and follow-up (approximately 4 months post-baseline and approximately 8-12 months post-baseline after the transition to adult diabetes care). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03734107
Study type Interventional
Source Children's National Research Institute
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date November 6, 2018
Completion date December 15, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04476472 - Omnipod Horizon™ Automated Glucose Control System Preschool Cohort N/A
Completed NCT03635437 - Evaluation of Safety and Diabetes Status Upon Oral Treatment With GABA in Patients With Longstanding Type-1 Diabetes Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT04909580 - Decision Coaching for Youth and Parents Considering Insulin Delivery Methods for Type 1 Diabetes N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT00679042 - Islet Transplantation in Type 1 Diabetic Patients Using the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) Protocol Phase 3
Completed NCT03293082 - Preschool CGM Use and Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT04016662 - Automated Insulin Delivery in Elderly With Type 1 Diabetes (AIDE T1D) Phase 4
Completed NCT02527265 - Afrezza Safety and Pharmacokinetics Study in Pediatric Patients Phase 2
Completed NCT03738865 - G-Pen Compared to Glucagen Hypokit for Severe Hypoglycemia Rescue in Adults With Type 1 Diabetes Phase 3
Completed NCT03240432 - Wireless Innovation for Seniors With Diabetes Mellitus N/A
Completed NCT03168867 - Effectiveness Trial of an E-Health Intervention To Support Diabetes Care in Minority Youth (3Ms) N/A
Completed NCT03674281 - The VRIF Trial: Hypoglycemia Reduction With Automated-Insulin Delivery System N/A
Completed NCT03669770 - Ultrasound Classification and Grading of Lipohypertrophy and Its Impact on Glucose Variability in Type 1 Diabetes
Recruiting NCT03682640 - Azithromycin Insulin Diet Intervention Trial in Type 1 Diabetes Phase 2
Recruiting NCT04096794 - Chinese Alliance for Type 1 Diabetes Multi-center Collaborative Research
Completed NCT02882737 - The Impact of Subcutaneous Glucagon Before, During and After Exercise a Study in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus N/A
Recruiting NCT02745808 - Injectable Collagen Scaffold™ Combined With HUC-MSCs for the Improvement of Erectile Function in Men With Diabetes Phase 1
Withdrawn NCT02518022 - How to be Safe With Alcoholic Drinks in Diabetes N/A
Completed NCT02562313 - A Trial Investigating the Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion of a Liquid Formulation of BioChaperone Insulin Lispro in Comparison to Humalog® Phase 1
Completed NCT02596204 - Diabetes Care Transformation: Diabetes Data Registry and Intensive Remote Monitoring N/A
Completed NCT02558491 - Feasibility of a Decision Support System to Reduce Glucose Variability in Subject With T1DM N/A