Diabetes Clinical Trial
Official title:
Using Pharmacogenetics to Improve Treatment in Early-onset Diabetes
Monogenic diabetes is an unusual form of diabetes. It usually presents in patients under the age of 30, so is often misdiagnosed as Type 1 diabetes which is more common. Patients with monogenic diabetes can often be treated with tablets rather than insulin injections, leading to better control of their diabetes, and fewer side-effects and complications. Less than 5% of people with monogenic diabetes in the UK have been identified, meaning up to 20,000 patients may still be misdiagnosed and receiving inappropriate treatment. We want to identify the best way of ensuring that people diagnosed with diabetes under the age of 30 have all the necessary tests to ensure they have the correct treatment for their particular type of diabetes. A small number of people may, as part of this study, be found to have a specific genetic cause of their diabetes and in these cases we will measure the success and benefits of changing their treatment, usually from insulin injections to sulphonylurea tablets.
Aim:The aim of this project is to identify a patient pathway which ensures that patients with
young-onset diabetes (diagnosed <30 years) have a systematic series of investigations which
allow for appropriate genetic testing and hence appropriate alteration of therapy if
required.
Objectives:
1. To establish and test a care pathway to detect monogenic diabetes in patients with
diabetes diagnosed before the age of 30 years and currently under the age of 50 years.
This will indicate the prevalence of monogenic diabetes.
2. To measure the success, cost and potential economic benefit of changing the treatment of
those patients identified with monogenic diabetes from their initial therapy, typically
insulin injections, to appropriate treatment, usually oral sulphonylureas.
3. To obtain the necessary data to enable the development of an appropriate health economic
model.
This project will provide evidence for a cost-based model for a systematic care pathway for
the diagnosis and treatment of diabetes diagnosed < 30 years. The pathway will select
subjects by clinical, biochemical (urinary C peptide) and immunological (pancreatic
autoantibodies) criteria for genetic testing. The present approach relies on clinicians
recognising the possibility of a monogenic cause and arranging genetic testing. In the UK
less than 5% of the estimated cases of monogenic diabetes have been identified and this means
that up to 20,000 diabetic patients are receiving inappropriate treatment. Patients confirmed
by molecular genetic testing to have monogenic diabetes may benefit from changing from
insulin and other therapies, to treatment with sulphonylurea tablets or diet alone.
Systematic targeted use of molecular genetic testing in young-onset diabetes will result in
stratified treatment according to aetiology with improved efficacy, quality of life and long
term complication risk, while reducing side effects and cost.
This project aims to develop a pathway of testing in patients diagnosed under the age of 30
years, to identify those who should receive genetic testing. This will consist of three
stages: 1) a urine test that can determine if a patient is making their own insulin; 2) for
those who are making their own insulin, a further blood test will be carried out testing for
antibodies which are seen in Type 1 diabetes; 3) in those who are negative for the
antibodies, a genetic test will be carried out to determine whether they have monogenic
diabetes. Individuals who are found to have monogenic diabetes may have their treatment
changed.
Project Plan This project will be based in Exeter and undertaken in collaboration with
colleagues at Ninewells Hospital Trust and the University of Dundee in Scotland. Within the
defined geographical regions of Tayside and Devon, all patients with diabetes diagnosed under
30 years of age, and who are currently aged less than 50 years, will be invited to
participate in the study. We estimate that from a total population of 800,000 (400,000 in
Devon and 400,000 in Tayside) a potential group of 3,000 patients will be identified, of
which approximately 90% (n=2700) are likely to be insulin treated.
Initial procedure following recruitment:
Participants will be provided with a written patient information sheet, a consent form, a
urine sample container and written instructions for sample collection. Baseline data will be
collected either face to face or by telephone by a member of the research team. Participants
will be asked to provide a single urine sample 2 hours after their main meal of the day.
Baseline data on all subjects will include age, age at diagnosis, duration of diabetes,
height, weight, initial/current treatment, and any family history of diabetes. Permission to
access their medical records will be obtained in order to clarify or confirm relevant
clinical data. The participant will be asked to return the completed consent form and the
urine sample to the research team or through routine NHS courier service if samples are
returned to local GPs.
In Tayside, patients with a clinical diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes, aged over 16 years old,
will initially be recruited into the Scottish Diabetes Research Network Type 1 Diabetes
Bioresource (Ethics ref: 10/S140243). Those diagnosed under 30 years of age, who are
currently aged less than 50 years old, will be asked to return a post-meal urine sample to
the research team and will proceed as for other UNITED study participants.
Following this initial urine test, participants found to be UCPCR negative will be informed
of their result via a standardised letter. This will complete their involvement with the
project.
Participants found to be UCPCR positive will be informed of their result by a member of the
research team and given the opportunity to discuss the implications for the next stage of the
project.
1. UCPCR positive patients:
Participants will be invited to the Peninsula Clinical Research Facility (PCRF),
Ninewells Clinical Research Centre (NCRC), or a suitable local venue where blood samples
for pancreatic auto-antibodies (GAD and IA2), DNA extraction and HbA1c will be taken by
a member of the research team.
Following this initial antibody screen those participants found to be antibody positive
will be informed of their result via a standardised letter (Stage2/GADpos/Vs1/0810).
This will complete their involvement with the project.
Those participants found to be antibody negative will be informed of their result in
person by a member of the research team and given the opportunity to discuss the
implications for the next stage of the project.
2. UCPCR positive and Antibody negative patients:
Participants who are now known to be UCPCR positive and antibody negative will be
offered genetic screening for monogenic diabetes. Information will be provided by the
research team, who will be trained in genetic counselling, about the implications of
genetic testing and the possible consequences of a positive or negative result for the
individual and in the case of a positive result the implications for other family
members.
Those participants found to be negative following genetic screening will be informed of
their result by a member of the research team. This will be followed up by a
standardised letter (Stage2/neg-gen-test/Vs1/0810) and this will complete their
involvement with the project.
Those participants with a positive result following genetic screening will be informed
of their results in person by a member of the research team, and given the opportunity
to discuss the implications for the next stage of the project.
3. The participants in the subsequent stages of the project are those now defined as:
- UCPCR positive
- antibody negative
- confirmed to have a diagnosis of monogenic diabetes following molecular genetic
testing.
It is anticipated that participants may require a review and revision of their current
treatment. This review will be by the NHS Clinician who manages the participant's diabetes.
They will be informed by NHS Clinical experts in monogenic diabetes.
Transfer of patients identified with monogenic diabetes to alternative treatment Following
the review, all participants who are not on the appropriate treatment will be transferred to
sulphonylureas for HNF1A/HNF4A and no treatment for GCK mutations. As these subjects will
only be identified after they have gone through the screening program, in order to increase
numbers in this part of the project and to enable accurate assessment of potential costs and
benefits of the transfer, we will also recruit patients for this assessment by including
patients with monogenic diabetes diagnosed outside of the project. At present the diagnostic
lab is identifying approximately 10 new UK patients per month. Referring Clinicians will be
sent written information on the project via a standardised letter (MODY referring Clinician
covering letter - Vs1/0810) which will accompany test result. Participants identified through
this route will allow us to recruit additional patients to ensure that there are sufficient
data to achieve good confidence limits for the estimates required for the future development
of a health economic model.
The assessment of success of treatment transfer on glycaemic control and quality of life:
Participants will be asked to fill in baseline standardised questionnaires (ADDQoL, EQ5D and
the DTSQs) to assess patient reported outcomes including: the impact of diabetes on their
quality of life, their current health status and their treatment satisfaction while on their
current treatment. Child participants be asked to fill in age appropriate versions of the
study questionnaires: the ADDQoL-Teen,(for teenagers up to 16 years), the ADDQoL-Junior (for
5-8 year olds), ADDQoL- Junior Plus (for 9-12 year olds), the EQ-5D youth/children (age 7-12
years), DTSQ-Teen (teenagers up to 16 years of age). Where appropriate those with parental
responsibility will be asked to provide information by completing the DTSQ-Parent.
Following treatment change, participants will be followed up by the diabetes specialist
research nurses as often as the participant requires in order to assess their treatment
needs, or to provide emotional support. This may initially be daily for the first week, then
tailing off gradually as the individual becomes confident on their new treatment and their
blood glucose levels stablise. The timings will be dependent on individual need.
Post treatment questionnaire follow up:
1 month - repeat DTSQs and EQ5D 6 month - repeat DTSQs and EQ5D and ADDQoL 12 months repeat
DTSQs followed by DTSQc, EQ5D and ADDQoL.
Blood samples for HbA1C will be taken at 3, 6 and 12 months.
Participant involvement in the study will be complete 12 months following initial treatment
change. During this 12 month period the clinical care of these participants will remain the
responsibility of their NHS clinician. These clinicians will be informed by NHS experts in
monogenic diabetes.
Development of Heath Economic model prototype A health economic model will be developed to
compare the likely costs and effects of the new care pathway with current practice. This will
be informed by a systematic review of the current relevant economic literature and build on
existing economic models for diabetes. It will also be informed by results from this project.
Funding:This study has been funded by a grant from the Health Innovation Challenge Fund
(HICF) which is a joint venture between the Department of Health and the Wellcome Trust.
Project funding will be administered by the University of Exeter. A collaboration agreement
between the University of Exeter and the University of Dundee will be established to
determine the distribution of funding between the two organisations.
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