View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
Filter by:Primary Objective: To compare LixiLan to lixisenatide in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) change from baseline to Week 26 in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. Secondary Objective: To compare the overall efficacy and safety of LixiLan to lixisenatide (with or without OADs) over a 52 week treatment period in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
This is a trial of continuing sitagliptin versus withdrawing sitagliptin in participants with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and inadequate glycemic control who initiate and titrate insulin glargine (LANTUS®) based on a treat-to-target algorithm to achieve fasting glucose levels of 72-100 mg/dL (4-5.6 mmol/L). A primary hypothesis of this trial is that after 30 weeks, continuing sitagliptin results in a greater reduction of hemoglobin A1C (A1C) relative to withdrawing sitagliptin.
Safety and Efficacy Study of Tesofensine/Metoprolol Treatment in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
This study aims to determine which factors are related to change in diabetes-related distress and change in depressive symptoms after three years of follow-up in Asian adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus in primary care. The investigators will explore the impact of patient demographics, cardiometabolic control, medications adherence, health-related quality of life, self-efficacy and self-management behaviors on diabetes-related distress and depressive symptoms.
The purpose of the clinical trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of a relatively simple and short value-based emotion-focused educational programme in adults with type 2 diabetes (VEMOFIT) on diabetes-related distress, depressive symptoms, illness perception, medication adherence, quality of life, diabetes self-efficacy, self-care and clinical outcomes.
The main purpose of this project is to further explore the metabolic effects and the mechanisms underlying the improvement in glucose homeostasis following bariatric surgery. The project will involve both prevention and treatment of Type 2 Diabetes (T2D), and both pre-diabetic as well as diabetic subjects with obesity will be included. This part of the project focuses on patients with manifest T2D and they will be assigned to surgical and non-surgical intervention, respectively, in a strictly controlled and randomized manner.
The epidemic nature of type 2 diabetes mellitus, along with the downsides of current treatments, has raised the need for therapeutic alternatives. The aim of this study is to evaluate safety, tolerability, and the glucose-lowering effect of noninvasive peripheral electrical stimulation (PES) as an alternative treatment for diabetes.
Mi Puente (or "My Bridge") is a culturally-tailored, interdisciplinary approach designed to support at-risk Hispanic patients and their caregivers pre- and post-hospital discharge as they navigate the multi-level barriers that contribute to inequities in health care access and use, and in turn, perpetuate disparities in cardiometabolic and behavioral health. Mi Puente utilizes a sustainable nurse + volunteer peer team-based model, bridging partnership between inpatient and outpatient care settings to meet the integrated (i.e., physical and behavioral) health needs of Hispanics who are hospitalized with multiple chronic cardiometabolic conditions and one or more behavioral health concern(s). Participants will be tested at Scripps Mercy Hospital - a large, non-profit, safety net hospital located in the US/Mexico border region of South San Diego County, California. The proposed randomized controlled trial will test Mi Puente versus Usual Care (evidence-based, best practice discharge procedures) in improving hospital utilization, patient-reported, and cost effectiveness outcomes. Electronic medical records (EMR) will be used to identify eligible patients and examine primary outcomes.
The aim of this study is to test the efficacy of financial incentives augmented telephone-delivered diabetes education and skills training intervention in improving HbA1c levels in African Americans (AA) with type 2 diabetes (T2DM).
The proposed study is a randomized controlled, pilot effectiveness trial comparing the LoBAG diet to a control diet in 38 participants with DM2 over 12 weeks. Participants will have DM2 that is not under ideal glycemic control (HgbA1c 7.0-9.5%) and must be taking no glycemic medications or metformin. Participants will be free-living (given diet instruction and dietitian support, but asked to prepare meals in their own homes). The primary endpoint will be HgbA1c, measured at baseline and at the end of the 12-week diet intervention. Additional outcome measures will include: weight, fasting plasma glucose, fasting serum insulin, postprandial plasma glucose and serum insulin following a test meal consistent with the assigned diet, serum fructosamine, fasting serum lipids, stool samples for gut microbiome analysis, and surveys to assess quality of life, including the Diabetes Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire. Compliance outcomes will include: urine nitrogen to creatinine ratio, survey data, three-day food diaries, and unannounced 24-hour diet recalls.