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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02100488
Other study ID # CL4M Controls
Secondary ID 470/13/EC
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received March 27, 2014
Last updated November 14, 2015
Start date March 2014
Est. completion date October 2015

Study information

Verified date November 2015
Source Fundación para la Investigación del Hospital Clínico de Valencia
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority Spain: Spanish Agency of Medicines
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Achieving near-normoglycemia has been established as the main objective for most patients with diabetes. However, postprandial glucose control is a challenging issue in everyday diabetes care. Indeed, excessive postprandial glucose excursions are the major contributors to plasma glucose (PG) variability in subjects with type 1 diabetes (T1DM). In addition, the poor reproducibility of postprandial glucose response is burdensome for patients and healthcare professionals.

Automatic glucose control, the so-called artificial pancreas or closed-loop system, may represent the ideal solution for reaching the therapeutic goals in diabetic patients. Intuitively, closed-loop insulin delivery may be superior to open-loop insulin delivery due to a better compensation of the variability of subcutaneous insulin absorption and the intra-subject insulin sensitivity. However, several challenges exist to effectively realize an optimal postprandial closed-loop control of blood glucose. Indeed, the eating process induces one of the major glucose perturbations that need to be controlled by an artificial pancreas and is currently one of the main challenges found in clinical validations of the few existing prototypes of an artificial pancreas. In particular, experiments carried out with the currently used algorithms for glucose control (the so called PID and MPC) showed that closed-loop insulin delivery often tend to overcorrect hyperglycemia thus increasing the risk hypoglycemia.

In this project, a rigorous clinical testing of a novel closed-loop controller ('artificial pancreas') will be carried out in T1DM patients treated with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). The innovative element of the controller is a safety auxiliary feedback based on sliding mode reference conditioning (SMRC), which has been demonstrated (in simulation studies) to limit over-insulinization and the resulting hypoglycemia, reducing glycaemic variability.

Standardized meal test studies will be performed in T1DM subjects treated with CSII, comparing the administration of a classical bolus (open-loop study) with a controller-driven prandial insulin delivery (closed-loop study) based on continuous subcutaneous glucose monitoring (CGM).

The hypothesis is that closed loop control will provide better postprandial control, especially in terms of reduction of glucose variability and incidence of hypoglycemia.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 20
Est. completion date October 2015
Est. primary completion date July 2015
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender Both
Age group 18 Years to 60 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Subjects with type 1 diabetes mellitus

- Continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII) treatment for at least six months before Visit 1

- Body mass index of between 18 and 30 kg/m2

- HbA1c 6.0-8.5% at Visit 1

- Normal laboratory values, ECG, and vital signs unless the investigator considered an abnormality to be clinically irrelevant

- Women postmenopausal or using contraception judged by the investigator to be adequate (e.g., oral contraceptives, intra-uterine device or surgical treatment), or with a negative negative urine pregnancy tests at visits 1, 3 and 5

Exclusion Criteria:

- Pregnancy and lactation

- History of hypersensitivity to the study medications or to drugs with similar chemical structures

- Hypoglycaemia unawareness

- Progressive fatal diseases

- History of drug or alcohol abuse

- History of positive HIV or hepatitis B or C test

- Impaired hepatic function, as shown by, but not limited to, SGPT or SGOT of more than twice the upper limit of the normal range at visit 1

- Impaired renal function, as shown by, but not limited to, serum creatinine > 1.5 mg/dL at visit 1

- Clinically relevant microvascular (pre-proliferative and proliferative retinopathy and macroalbuminuria), cardiovascular, hepatic, neurologic, endocrine or other major systemic diseases other than T1DM which could hinder implementation of the clinical study protocol or interpretation of the study results

- Pre-planned surgery during the study

- Blood donation of more than 500 ml during the past three months for men, or during the past six months for women

- Mental condition rendering the subject unable to understand the nature, scope and possible consequences of the study

- Subject unlikely to comply with clinical study protocol, e.g., uncooperative attitude, inability to return for follow-up visits, or poor likelihood of completing the study

- Receipt of an experimental drug or use of an experimental device during the past 30 days.

Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
Closed-loop insulin infusion system
Each subject will undergo two "Open-loop" and two "Closed-loop" meal tests, each one at 1-2 week intervals, thus completing the 4 experiments in about 6 weeks. The day of the experiment, a standard mixed meal test containing 60 g of carbohydrates (CHO), will be administered. On two occasions, patients will receive in a randomized order the standard insulin bolus based on the individual insulin to CHO ratio (First arm, Open-loop study). On the other two occasions they will receive a Sliding Mode Reference Conditioning (SMRC) Closed-loop insulin administration, based on subcutaneous continuous glucose monitoring (Second arm, Closed-loop study). Commercial insulin infusion systems and continuous glucose monitoring devices will be used.
Other:
Open-loop insulin infusion system
Standard subcutaneous insulin infusion based on the individual insulin to carbohydrate ratio. Commercial insulin infusion systems and continuous glucose monitoring devices will be used.

Locations

Country Name City State
Spain Hospital Clínic i Universitari de Barcelona Barcelona
Spain Hospital Clínico Universitario de Valencia Valencia

Sponsors (4)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Fundación para la Investigación del Hospital Clínico de Valencia Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, Universidad Politécnica de Valencia, Universitat de Girona

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Spain, 

References & Publications (1)

Revert A, Garelli F, Pico J, De Battista H, Rossetti P, Vehi J, Bondia J. Safety auxiliary feedback element for the artificial pancreas in type 1 diabetes. IEEE Trans Biomed Eng. 2013 Aug;60(8):2113-22. doi: 10.1109/TBME.2013.2247602. Epub 2013 Feb 15. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Other AUC_PG_0-8h Area under the curve of plasma glucose (PG) during the 8h post-prandial period the 8h post-prandial period No
Other Time into range Time spent in an acceptable glycaemic range (70-180 mg/dl), during the postprandial period 0-8h post-prandial period No
Primary Intra-subject postprandial glycemic variability Clinical validation of a new algorithm (glucose controller) for closed-loop control of postprandial glucose in comparison with a standard bolus (open-loop control), in type 1 diabetic subjects using insulin pump therapy. The robustness and effectiveness of the new algorithm for closed-loop glycaemic control (PID controller modified by SMRC-based external loop adjustments) will be evaluated through measurement of intra-subject postprandial glycemic variability expressed as the coefficient of variation (CV) of the area under the curve (AUC) of plasma glucose (PG) during the 8h post-prandial period (CV_AUC-PG_0-8h).
The hypothesis is that closed-loop insulin infusion reduces postprandial glucose variability as compared with standard treatment.
Eight-hour post-prandial period No
Secondary CV_AUC-PG_3-8h Coefficient of variation of the area under the curve (AUC) of plasma glucose (PG) during the late postprandial phase. the 3-8 hour post-prandial interval No
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