View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
Filter by:The present project is designed to test the hypothesis that arginase contributes to microvascular endothelial dysfunction in patients with type 2 diabetes and microvascular complications.
The objectives of the study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of DS-8500a compared with placebo in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) receiving sitagliptin.
A 24-week, randomized, open-label study investigating the efficacy, safety and tolerability of colesevelam 3.75 g daily compared to ezetimibe 10 mg daily, as an add-on to baseline statin therapy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) who are not at target for glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) (> 7.0%) and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (> 2.0 mmol/L).
This study is a retrospective chart review study aiming to assess the characteristics and health outcomes of patients with type 2 diabetes treated with canagliflozin when used in addition to insulin therapy. Furthermore, the project aims to establish an EMR-based cohort of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) treated with canagliflozin to allow for future longitudinal studies that investigate outcomes over a longer follow-up period, and whether canagliflozin (when used in addition to insulin therapy) has an impact on diabetes-related healthcare costs.
The aim of this study is to evaluate safety and efficacy of therapy with saxagliptin 5mg co-administered with dapagliflozin 5mg, compared to therapy with saxagliptin 5mg or dapagliflozin 5mg in patients who are inadequately controlled on ≥1500mg/day of metformin monotherapy.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is characterized by wide fluctuations of glucose. The long-acting insulin has showed to improve glycemic variability however the behavior of insulin glargine versus insulin degludec is unknown.
The loop duodenal switch (L-DS) is a single-anastomosis biliopancreatic diversion with duodenal switch (BPD-DS) procedure. The original BPD-DS has two-anastomosis and is an accepted and approved bariatric procedure by the American Society of Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. Preliminary data from Sanchez-Pernaute et al. (2013) indicates that the L-DS procedure is safer and easier to perform as it only requires one anastomosis compared to the BPD-DS, and offers good results for treatment of both morbid obesity and its metabolic comorbidities, including type-2 diabetes mellitus. However, the initial publications of the loop DS still resulted in a small number of patients with total protein malnutrition. For this reason, the investigators will study the loop DS with a modification of the originally published technique with a longer common channel limb (300 cm) to reduce the risk of protein malnutrition For patients with a BMI >50, many are limited to just a sleeve gastrectomy as other bariatric procedures are technically challenging with increased operative risk. A loop duodenal switch may be a safer operation with improved weight loss for the super-morbidly obese patient.
The objective of the study is to evaluate change in insulin secretory capacity in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus as determined by hyperglycemic clamp after a 28-day oral administration of DS-8500a at 75 mg in a placebo-controlled, 2 × 2 crossover study. In addition, safety of this regimen will be examined in this study.
This study evaluates the effect of ginger on NF-KB level in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells in type 2 diabetic patients. Half of patients will receive ginger, while the other half will receive placebo.
The intensification of the management for the control of glycaemia and other risk factors in patients with type 2 diabetes (DM2) results in a reduction of diabetes-related complications. The strategy to increase the competences of primary care professionals to improve health care has been mainly prompted by the current context of limited resources and restricted access to specialty care. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of an integral intervention carried out by primary care professionals with the following components: 1. detection of patients with poor diabetic control; 2. introduction of a specific consultation on diabetes followed by virtual and telephone specialist support; 3. introduction of other measures to overcome patients and professionals barriers to treatment. The main objective of the study is to determine if glycaemic control as measured by the mean concentration of HbA1c of poorly controlled patients improves when these patients are evaluated and treated in primary care under the integral strategy proposed in this study. The INTEGRA project also includes Phase 1 (qualitative research study), which is aimed at identifying viable strategies to suppress barriers to treatment; these strategies have been included to the intervention study (phase 2). Phase 2 is a controlled, quasi-experimental intervention that involves 9 primary care centres of 3 regions (Lleida, Girona, Barcelona). The participants are patients with DM2 with poor glycaemic control that meet all the inclusion criteria and sign the informed consent. The intervention study will have three arms: (1) Control Group; (2) Intervention Group 1 (diabetes specific consultation + additional measures originated in phase 1; and (3) Intervention Group 2 (additional measures originated in phase 1). Phase 1 has been conducted during the last 6 months previous to the initiation of the proposed intervention study and consisted of a qualitative design (individualized interviews with randomly selected patients in each of the participating centers); this qualitative study has contributed to design the final intervention applied on phase 2, particularly, implementing additional measures as coaching sessions to health professionals of the participating centers and automated messaging to patients with reminder and motivational objectives. Phase 2 consists of a recruitment period of 6 months, followed by a 12-month follow-up for each patient