Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Study On The Effectiveness Of Using Automated Mobile Phone Text Messaging In Improving Glycaemic Control Among Newly Detected Type 2 Diabetic Patients
In India, the high diabetes prevalence and cost of its management relative to their personal income render the country an appropriate environment to seek and test new, less expensive aids to care. Education and motivation to induce behavioural modification, are important components of care. Conventional diabetes education programmes involving personal contact methods are useful but expensive. Compliance with medications is also important and there are data to suggest that compliance is low in people with established type 2 diabetes (there is little information on those with recently diagnosed disease). Mobile phones could provide an inexpensive and scaleable delivery vehicle for components of care. There are now more than 5 billion wireless subscribers and 70% of them live in low and middle income countries. Mobile phone ownership is high in India and an increasing proportion now has Mobile phones and/or home computers. The investigators plan a clinical trial in India to assess whether there is benefit from an enhanced text message intervention delivered by mobile phone in people newly diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes. The message content will be directed to behavioural modification, as with our diabetes prevention studies, and will attempt to improve compliance with drug therapy and other aspects of care, as with our studies in people with established diabetes. The investigators shall compare effects on glycaemia, other cardiovascular risk factors, lifestyle behaviour and quality of life, with those observed in people with type 2 diabetes receiving standard care.
India currently has 65 million people with type 2 diabetes and the number is increasing. In
addition to its human costs, diabetes imposes a large economic burden. In those of average
income in India, diabetes care consumes 25% of the family budget where one member is affected
and proportionately more when there are other affected members (which is not uncommon); much
of this expenditure is on medical and nursing costs aimed at achieving good glycaemic
control. Diabetes management is important because it leads to better long-term clinical
outcomes. The proof of principle trial - United Kingdom Prospective Diabetes Study (UKPDS) in
patients with type 2 diabetes demonstrated that glycaemic control from the time of diagnosis
produced beneficial effects during the trial and that these persisted for at least ten years
afterwards (despite the confluence of HbA1c levels post-trial). There was continued
improvement in microvascular complications and emergent significant reductions in myocardial
infarction and death - the 'legacy effect'. Similar prolonged benefit has been demonstrated
for Type 1 diabetes in the Diabetes Control and Complication Trial (DCCT) and its follow-up
(for at least 17 years).
Improving glycaemic control involves lifestyle modification (diet and physical activity),
prompt introduction of hypoglycaemic therapy where necessary and then compliance with the
treatment and monitoring. Dietary measures early after diagnosis lead to improved glycaemia
and reductions in other cardiovascular risk factors. The importance of physical activity is
often overlooked, but it contributes to maintenance of weight loss long-term, improves
physical fitness and reduces cardiovascular risk factors. At or shortly after diagnosis,
diabetes education aiming at lifestyle change is helpful in modifying behaviour and can
reduce HbA1c. Although these programmes are effective, the benefits diminished over time e.g.
the DESMOND programme resulted in improved HbA1c levels at twelve months but not at three
years. There is evidence that the sustained benefit may be more likely if the educational
programme is reinforced at a later stage. A major barrier to implementation of all education
programmes, and particularly those which include reinforcement, is cost. Because they involve
personal contact, the programmes are expensive and in reality, are offered to only small
proportion of patients, even in developed countries. Although attempts have been made to
utilise trained non-medical, non-nursing staff in education programmes in India, this model,
while less expensive, has not been widely adopted. Attendance at educational sessions is also
problematic, as it requires taking time off work or away from the family, or the venue is
considered inaccessible.
Text messaging (short message service, SMS) has the potential to overcome some of the
difficulties. It is relatively cheap and potentially scalable. For example, in people with
pre-diabetes in India the investigators have shown a 36% reduction in progression to diabetes
over 2 years with text messaging-assisted behavioural modification. This reduction is similar
to that achieved in India using personal contact methods. There are relatively few high
quality studies on the role of text messaging or mobile phone contact as an aid to management
of established Type 2 diabetes. In a pilot study in India, the investigators have
demonstrated that text messaging can improve compliance with medications. A recent Cochrane
review of IT-assisted methodologies for diabetes care and education suggested a small benefit
for glycaemia, greatest where mobile phones (as opposed to home computers) were the delivery
medium. The average lowering of HbA1c, as a result of mobile phone input on a range of
studies was 5.5 mmol/mol (0.5%). This is clinically significant. Part of the reason for this
benefit may reside in the nature of mobile phone contacts, being passive and, if
appropriately designed, the message content can be encouraging rather than threatening in
nature. The messages can also be sent repeatedly, with their frequency and timing dictated by
the recipient.
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