Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04437485 |
Other study ID # |
1908716624 |
Secondary ID |
R21DK123582 |
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 14, 2020 |
Est. completion date |
August 29, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
October 2023 |
Source |
Indiana University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This pilot randomized controlled trial seeks: (1) to determine the preliminary efficacy of
our modernized collaborative care intervention for depression in improving the diabetes risk
markers of hemoglobin A1c and insulin resistance and (2) to explore whether somatic
depressive symptoms - i.e., hyperphagia (increased appetite/weight) and/or hypersomnia
(increased sleep) - moderate the effect of the eIMPACT-DM intervention on diabetes risk
markers.
Description:
Diabetes affects 31 million (12%) U.S. adults, and another 82 million (34%) adults have
prediabetes, a precursor to diabetes. The ramifications of diabetes are grave and include
cardiovascular disease, disability, and death. While these statistics highlight the
importance of diabetes prevention, current approaches have only partial effectiveness. This
has created a clear need to identify new primary prevention targets and approaches for
diabetes, and depression and depression treatment are strong candidates in this regard. Over
20 years of evidence indicates that depression is an independent, clinically important,
robust, biobehaviorally plausible, and modifiable risk factor for diabetes. However, research
has yet to determine whether depression treatment can prevent the development of diabetes in
people with prediabetes. Given that depression is still receiving limited attention in
settings where diabetes prevention occurs (e.g., primary care), there is a large cohort of
patients with an underdetected or undertreated diabetes risk factor (depression). This status
quo and the strong state of the depression-to-diabetes science create the need for a pilot
randomized controlled trial to evaluate the utility of depression treatment as a new diabetes
prevention strategy. Thus, we propose a pilot RCT of 64 primary care patients (50% minority)
with a depressive disorder and prediabetes. Patients will be randomized to 6 months of
eIMPACT-DM (intervention) or Active Control (comparator). eIMPACT-DM is our modernized
collaborative stepped care intervention consisting of (1) computerized and telephonic
cognitive-behavioral therapy for depression and (2) select antidepressant medications
included in an algorithm optimized for diabetes risk reduction. Our preliminary data
establish the feasibility and antidepressive efficacy of eIMPACT-DM. The Active Control
consists of depression education, symptom monitoring, and primary care for depression. Our
primary aim is to determine the preliminary efficacy of eIMPACT-DM in improving the diabetes
risk markers of hemoglobin A1c (primary outcome) and insulin resistance (secondary outcome).
Our exploratory aim is to explore whether somatic depressive symptoms - i.e., hyperphagia
(increased appetite/weight) and/or hypersomnia (increased sleep) - moderate the effect of
eIMPACT-DM on diabetes risk markers. A positive pilot trial would pave the way to an
R01-level RCT by: (1) generating critical proof-of-concept data (eIMPACT-DM can improve A1c)
to support the premise of the definitive trial; (2) providing preliminary effect sizes for
eIMPACT-DM on diabetes risk markers to help justify future power analyses; (3) identifying a
potentially important moderator of eIMPACT-DM efficacy that may need to be incorporated into
the definitive trial. Ultimately, demonstrating that depression treatment reduces diabetes
risk would identify a novel target (depression) for diabetes prevention efforts, and it would
equip healthcare providers with a new practical, scalable, and disseminable intervention
(eIMPACT-DM) to help lower diabetes risk for a large cohort of high-risk patients. These
practice changes should translate into reduced diabetes morbidity, mortality, and costs.