View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the effect of food on the single-dose PK of SHR3824, SP2086 and metformin in the HR20031 FDC tablets in healthy subjects.
The purpose of this study is to assess the bioequivalence between HR20031 FDC tablet and co-administration of SHR3824 tablets, SP2086 tablets and metformin XR tablets.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility, fidelity and acceptability of an 8-week high intensity online physical exercise combined with online group meetings and supported with an activity tracker in individuals with type 2 diabetes. The design of the intervention will be developed using a co-creation approach. The intervention consist of eight weeks of 30 minutes online physical exercise followed by 30 minutes of online group meeting in Microsoft Teams once a week. Outcomes includes pre-defined research progression criteria and secondary outcomes of physical and mental health and participant feedback.
This study was planned to examine the effect of home-based mini trampoline exercise program on diabetic foot care behavior and diabetic polyneuropathy in Type 2 diabetes patients.
The aim of this study is to determine the concentrations of Visfatin, Fetuin-A and Sirtuin 1 in the gingival crevicular fluid and clinical periodontal parameters in diabetic and systemically healthy individuals and to determine whether non-surgical periodontal treatment had any effect on these biomarkers and periodontal clinical parameters at the end of a 3-month follow-up period. The hypothesis of our study is that gingival crevicular fluid Visfatin, Fetuin-A and Sirtuin 1 concentrations will change with non-surgical periodontal treatment in type 2 diabetic and systemically healthy individuals and that this change will be associated with diabetes and clinical parameters.
This is an observational study, in which data from the past of people with chronic kidney disease (CKD) together with type 2 diabetes (T2D) are studied. The participants in this study were treated in the past with a type of drug called SGLT2 inhibitor alone or with SGLT2 inhibitors in combination with finerenone. In observational studies, only observations are made without specified advice or interventions. CKD is a long-term progressive decrease in the kidneys' ability to work properly. In people with T2D, the body does not make enough of a hormone called insulin, or does not use insulin well enough, resulting in high blood sugar levels that can cause damage to the kidneys. Chronic kidney disease often occurs together with / as a consequence of type 2 diabetes. SGLT2 inhibitors lower blood sugar levels by increasing sugar removal from the blood into the urine. SGLT2 inhibitors are the standard of care (SOC) treatment for CKD and T2D. SOC is the treatment that medical experts consider most appropriate for a disease. The drug finerenone works by blocking certain proteins, called mineralocorticoid receptors. By doing this, finerenone reduces damage to kidneys, heart and blood vessels. It is available and approved for doctors to prescribe to people with CKD together with T2D. Results from two earlier clinical studies called FIDELIO-DKD and FIGARO-DKD in participants with CKD together with T2D are available. These results suggest that the treatment combination of finerenone and SGLT2 inhibitors may work better than taking SGLT2 inhibitors alone. The treatment combination may further slow down a worsening of the participants' - kidney disease - heart and blood circulation health. Due to a limited number of participants treated with SGLT2 inhibitors alone however, the data from the two earlier studies does not allow to draw conclusions. The main objective of this study is to combine additional real world data from SGLT2 inhibitor users with the study data from the earlier studies to get clearer results. Before combining the data however, statistical tests need to prove that this is allowed. If this is the case, the new combined "control" data can be compared with the data from the combination treatment group from the earlier studies. This will allow the researchers to get more proof and draw conclusions of how well the treatment combination works compared to SGLT2 inhibitors alone. The real world data will come from a database called Optum. It will cover the period from January 2013 to September 2021. Only data from people who are similar to the participants of the control group of the earlier studies and meet certain criteria will be selected. Only data from the past is collected and studied. There are no required visits or tests in this study.
The purpose of this study to investigate the effects of personalized diabetes text messaging (DB-TEXT) combined with PSE in patients with type 2 diabetes. This study is an assessor-blinded, three-arm, parallel randomized controlled trial. Additionally, the investigators will use the CONSORT guidelines to report of trial finding. A diabetes management centers in East Java Province will be recruited for the participants from December 2022 to March 2023. The investigators will include participants who had been diagnosed with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes (having HbA1C level of > 7% in the past three months), and who were 17 years or older (the legal age to provide informed consent in Indonesia) and having their own mobile phone. People who could not read or write Indonesian; had medical diagnostic with cognitive impairments, psychiatric disorders, or were diagnosed with cancer before the study will be excluded from the study. The outcomes of the study including demographic and disease characteristic, clinical outcomes, fatigue, sleep quality, depression, and quality of life. For the clinical outcomes, will be measured in laboratory test in diabetes management centers. Fatigue level will be measured using the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory-20 (MFI-20), sleep quality will be measured using a Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI), the Beck Depression Inventory-Second Edition (BDI-II) will be used to measure the depression level, and the Diabetes Quality of Life-Brief Clinical Inventory (The DQoL-BCI) will be used to assess the quality of life.
In noncritically hospitalized patients, hyperglycemia (defined as blood glucose [BG] levels >140 mg/dL) is a common, serious, and costly healthcare problem. On the other hand, the treatment of hyperglycemia is associated with decreased mortality and morbidity. Therefore, clinical guidelines from professional organizations recommend using subcutaneous insulin as the preferred therapy in hospitalized patients in a non-intensive care unit setting (target glucose range 100 - 180 mg/dl). The most recommended regimen is basal-bolus insulin therapy, although this regimen requires multiple daily insulin injections and is associated with a significant risk of hypoglycemia (reported in up to 32%). Thus, a more straightforward regimen that results in similar glycemic efficacy to basal-bolus insulin with less risk of hypoglycemia could improve care for this group of patients. The basal-plus insulin regimen consists of a daily dose of basal insulin with supplemental (corrective) doses of rapid-acting insulin analogue before meals. This has similar efficacy and safety as the basal-bolus regimen. However, the basal-plus scheme does not provide prandial coverage of insulin. In another vein, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors are a class of oral glucose-lowering agents that reduce the breakdown of endogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), stimulating insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent manner. Some clinical trials have demonstrated that DPP-4 inhibitors, in combination with insulin, result in similar improvement in glycemic control and lower rates of hypoglycemia compared to basal-bolus insulin regimens. For the above, using a long-acting insulin analogue with a DPP-4 inhibitor could provide better glycemic control basal and prandial, and this scheme could represent an alternative to using a basal-plus regimen alone. In the present study, the investigators will conduct a prospective randomized clinical trial (RCT) to compare the DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, combined with basal-plus insulin therapy and basal-plus insulin scheme alone in non-critical hospitalized patients.
To evaluate the single-dose subcutaneous injection of insulin degludec injection (Tresiba®) listed by Novo Nordisk in China as a reference drug, the insulin degludec injection provided by Dongguan Dongyang Sunshine Biopharmaceutical R&D Co., Ltd. (RD15003) pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamic characteristics in healthy subjects, and then to evaluate the bioequivalence of test drugs and control drugs.
This study is a pilot RCT to examine the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness of a 6-week acceptance-based diabetes education programme (ACT-DE) on diabetes distress, self-care efficacy and behaviours of adults with type 2 diabetes in Hong Kong. It is hypothesise that the ACT-DE programme will: - Be acceptable, feasible and beneficial for adults with type 2 diabetes to improve their psychological distress and self-care. - Significantly reduce participants' diabetes distress (primary outcomes), when compared with the usual care (control) group immediately post-intervention; - Significantly improve self-care efficacy, self-care behaviour and psychological flexibility (secondary outcomes) than the control group immediately post-intervention.