View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes.
Filter by:The study is a randomised double blind placebo control cross over trial with 4 weeks washout period. The expected duration of participant participation is 103 days. the study aims to investigate the effect of dapagliflozin, a SGLT2 inhibitor, on glucose flux, lipolysis and exercise in patients with type 2 diabetes.
The purpose of this study is to assess the benefits of a painless lancing device among diabetes subjects in improving self-monitoring frequency and HbA1c compared to the conventional lancing device.
Despite the significant relationship between depression and diabetes, there are few published studies testing the effect of cognitive behavioral therapy in improving disease outcomes among diabetics in primary healthcare settings in Egypt. The study aims at assessing the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy combined with diabetes education versus control receiving diabetes education alone in helping patients with Type 2 Diabetes and depressive symptoms to achieve glycemic control and compliance to treatment.
The primary objective is to determine the cross-sectional relationship between sleep duration (as measured by 14 days of actigraphy) and glycemic control in an adolescent Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) cohort (age 12-20y, n=67). A secondary objective is to determine if a loss-framed incentive for achieving sleep goals can increase sleep duration in 15 adolescent patients diagnosed with T2DM with insufficient sleep. Another secondary objective is to test if increasing sleep duration leads to improved glycemic control in 15 adolescents with T2DM identified in Aim 1 as having <8 hr sleep/evening. A focus group will be conducted prior to this intervention with patients ineligible for the intervention in order to determine appropriate text messaging.
This is a Phase 1 study designed to assess the safety and tolerability of MEDI0382 (Cotadutide) in Japanese T2DM patients.
Type 2 diabetes is associated with increased cortical bone porosity and increased fracture risk. The goal of this proposed study is to understand the longitudinal evolution of cortical bone porosity and to investigate the underlying biological processes that drive increased cortical porosity and fracture risk in the setting of diabetes. The investigators will apply novel techniques for in vivo imaging of cortical pores to patients with type 2 diabetes and controls in a longitudinal prospective study. This work will establish the longitudinal progression of cortical porosity and determine whether pore content can serve as a predictor of future cortical degradation and bone fragility.
Delay in commencing insulin among type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) patients is common. One of the reasons is patients' psychological insulin resistance (PIR), which is particularly prevalent in Chinese patients. The Chinese Attitudes to Starting Insulin Questionnaire (Ch-ASIQ) is the shortest locally validated questionnaire which is developed to understand the condition of PIR in T2DM patients while brief motivational interviewing has been shown to improve patients' collaborations and satisfactions, the alliance between patients and doctors, and the treatment adherence. Therefore, this study aims to investigate the efficacy of a one-session educational intervention targeting psychological insulin resistance guided by Ch-ASIQ in promoting the insulin acceptance and initiation. A quasi-experimental study will be conducted on 130 insulin-naïve T2DM patients recruited from a primary care setting. Eligible participants in the intervention group will be treated with one 15-minute brief motivational interviewing guided by Ch-ASIQ while those in control group will be treated with usual care. Both groups will be further followed up for 6 months to observe for their insulin initiation. The primary outcomes: i. the proportion of patient referral to insulin clinic (insulin acceptance), and ii. the proportion of patient with insulin initiation (actual start of insulin therapy).
The objective of this protocol is to answer the questions: 1) Are financial incentives layered upon nurse education and home telemonitoring superior to nurse education and home telemonitoring alone in improving metabolic control long term? 2) Are the effects of financial incentives on metabolic control sustained once the incentives are withdrawn? and 3) Are financial incentives efficacious within and consistent across racial/ethnic groups? This study provides a unique opportunity to address these gaps in the literature. Investigators propose a randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of a Financial Incentives And Nurse Coaching to Enhance Diabetes Outcomes (FINANCE-DM) intervention comprised of: 1) nurse education, 2) home telemonitoring, and 3) structured financial incentives; compared to an active control group (nurse education and home telemonitoring alone). The study also will evaluate whether intervention effects are sustained 6 months after the financial incentives are withdrawn (i.e. 18 months post randomization); and whether the intervention is differentially efficacious across racial/ethnic groups.
The objective of this protocol is to evaluate the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of 8 sessions of in-home, telephone-delivered, culturally-modified, manualized diabetes-modified, behavioral activation treatment (Home DM-BAT) delivered by trained diabetes nurse educators among low income, ethnic minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM. The aims of this randomized controlled efficacy trial are: Aim 1: To test the efficacy of Home DM-BAT on clinical outcomes (hemoglobin A1c, blood pressure, and LDL-Cholesterol). Hypothesis 1: Low income, minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM randomized to Home DM-BAT will have significantly greater improvements in clinical outcomes (hemoglobin A1c, blood pressure, and LDL-Cholesterol) at 12 months of follow-up compared to the control group (in-home, telephone-delivered supportive therapy - ST). Aim 2: To test the efficacy of Home DM-BAT on behavioral outcomes (home blood glucose monitoring, diet, exercise and medication adherence) and quality of life. Hypothesis 2: Low income, minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM randomized to Home DM-BAT will have significantly greater improvements in behavioral outcomes (home blood glucose monitoring, diet, exercise and medication adherence) and quality of life (physical and mental health components of SF-12) at 12 months of follow-up compared to the control group. Aim 3: To determine the cost-effectiveness of Home DM-BAT intervention for diabetes. Hypothesis 3: Home DM-BAT will be more cost-effective in improving hemoglobin A1c levels at 12 months of follow-up, compared to the control group, as measured by differences in program costs, resource utilization, and hemoglobin A1c levels.
BEYOND represents an open-label, parallel, three-arm randomized controlled trial, aimed at evaluating the effects of combination therapy of fixed ratio basal insulin/GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) or basal insulin/SGLT-2 inhibitors (SGLT-2i) on the durability of the glycemic control, as compared with the basal bolus insulin regimen, in people with type 2 diabetes failing to achieve glycemic targets with injective therapy. The potential benefits for participants in the study include the possibility of improving the glyco-metabolic control with drugs that have been evaluated as safe and protective for the heart and the kidneys. The primary outcome of the study is the mean HbA1c change between groups at six months. Participants in the study will be followed for subsequent 18 months in order to evaluate the durability of glycemic control and the chenge of other secondary outcomes.