View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes.
Filter by:This clinical study aims to evaluate the effects of using the "WellCheck" mobile application on blood glucose, blood pressure, and weight among Type 2 diabetes patients in real primary care settings. It is a prospective, multi-center, cluster-randomized, pragmatic clinical trial. Patients who can use the digital healthcare mobile application without difficulty are recruited based on the clinical judgment of the attending physician.
This randomized controlled trial will test the efficacy and safety of automated insulin delivery (AID) in hospitalized patients with diabetes (type 1 or type 2) requiring insulin therapy who are admitted to general medical/surgical floors. The main objectives of this study are: - To test the efficacy and safety of AID versus multiple daily insulin injections (MDI) + CGM in the inpatient setting - To determine differences in CGM-derived metrics between AID and MDI plus CGM in the hospital and explore differences in treatment effect according to individual characteristics. Participants will be: - Randomized to AID + remote CGM (intervention) or multiple daily insulin injections (MDI) + CGM (control group) - Followed for a total of 10 days or until hospital discharge (if less than 10 days).
This study evaluated the efficacy and safety of initial combined treatment of Henggliptin, Retagliptin and Metformin by including new type 2 diabetes patients. This study is a multicenter, randomized, open label, positive control study. It is planned to include 160 new type 2 diabetes patients who meet the inclusion criteria of the study. The study is divided into three stages: screening period (V0, -14d-0), treatment period (V1-V8, D1-24w) and safe follow-up period (V9, 28w), with a total of 10 planned visits. This study was divided into an experimental group and a control group. The experimental group received a one-time addition of 10 mg qd of Henggliptin, 100 mg qd of Regagliptin, and 500mg of Metformin. The control group was first treated with metformin. If the blood sugar level did not meet the standard (fasting blood glucose (FPG)>7mmol/L, postprandial blood glucose (PPG)>10mmol/L), Henggeliflozin 10 mg qd was sequentially added. If the blood sugar level did not meet the standard after 4 weeks, Regagliptin 100 mg qd was added. During the follow-up period, evaluate blood glucose control, pancreatic islet function, and safety in both groups of patients.
There is a high prevalence of anxiety and depression in patients with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D). While past studies demonstrate the potential therapeutic effect of mindfulness-based interventions in patients with T2D, little is understood about the mode of delivery or quantity of the intervention necessary to experience benefits. This project aims to develop and implement a self-compassion tool kit based on the principles of mindfulness and meditation to better understand how self-compassion works to affect psychological health and wellbeing in patients with T2D. The investigators will study the impact of a self-compassion tool kit - including mindfulness meditation, exercise, journaling and sleep parameters - on T2D. Enhancing emotional well-being could complement current T2D treatments to facilitate improved quality of life.
2 weeks screening period, 3 weeks run-in period, 16 weeks double-blind treatment period, to evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of HRS-7535 in Subjects with Type 2 Diabetes who have Inadequate Glycemic Control on Metformin and SGLT2i.
A body of animal studies as well as observational studies in humans demonstrated that butyrate is one SCFA that has pronounced positive effects on body weight control, inflammation, and insulin resistance. Even though the SCFA hexanoate is less researched, it has been shown to be involved in anti-inflammatory processes. Of note, acute human studies showed that fibre-induced metabolic improvements are linked to higher SCFA levels in the systemic circulation. It has been shown that a butyrate/hexanoate-enriched triglyceride oil enhanced systemic butyrate and hexanoate concentrations for a prolonged time. Yet, it remains to be determined whether a chronic increase in circulating butyrate and hexanoate concentrations translate into long-term benefits. In this study it is hypothesized that a chronic increase of butyrate/hexanoate in the circulation may improve host metabolism and metabolic health by improving adipose tissue function, reducing systemic lipid overflow and inflammation thereby increasing peripheral insulin sensitivity in individual with overweight/obesity and prediabetes.
The Military Health and Nutrition Examination Study (MHANES) is a Department of Defense funded study conducted by Pennington Biomedical Research Center and the US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine. This cross-sectional study will assess, in a large, diverse sample of Army Service Members (n=600), food and supplement intake, cardiovascular health, body composition, biomarkers of nutritional status, measures of health status, injury prevalence, mental wellbeing, gut microbiome composition, and physical performance outcomes. The proposed study is modeled after the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) and customized for the Army population.
This study is evaluating a behavioral treatment program that uses diabetes coaching and financial rewards in addition to continuous glucose monitoring to improve diabetes management in adult patients with type 2 diabetes. This study will evaluate if this behavioral treatment program increases individual adherence to a diabetes treatment plan and improves blood sugar management.
Roux-en-Y (RYGB) gastric bypass reduces the size and capacity of the stomach and bypasses a portion of the small intestine which leads to decreased food intake and higher levels of a gut hormone called GLP-1 (glucagon-like-peptide-1). These changes lead to weight loss, improved blood sugars and often remission of type 2 diabetes but most patients do not qualify or want surgery. The investigators are searching for ways to make the beneficial effects of RYGB available to most type 2 diabetes patients rather than a select few that undergo RYGB. The investigators believe that parts of RYGB can be medically reproduced through a combination of diet and medicine. Once weekly injectable GLP-1 medicine that leads to weight loss and improved blood sugar control in type 2 diabetes are now FDA approved. Optifast is a medically supervised diet that safely reduces calorie intake to 800 calories per day for three months by replacing normal meals with specially prepared bars and shakes which leads to weight loss and improved blood sugar control in type 2 diabetes. Normal meals are then gradually reintroduced over 6 weeks and the bars/shakes are stopped. The investigators hypothesize that Optifast (diet) + once weekly GLP-1 will lead to weight loss and improvement in blood sugar control in type 2 diabetes similar to what is seen after RYGB.
The goal of this clinical trial is to test two advices on alcohol drinking in more than 10.000 Spanish adult drinkers (men of 50 or more years and women of 55 or more years). The main question it aims to answer is to test the non-inferiority advice of a moderate alcohol drinking pattern on all-cause mortality and other chronic disease like cardiovascular disease, cancer or type 2 diabetes. Participants will receive during 4 years an advice to drink alcohol following a Mediterranean Alcohol Drinking Pattern (MADP): consuming alcohol in moderation, avoidance of binge drinking and preference for red wine. Researchers will compare those who will receive a MADP advice with those who will receive an advice on abstention to see if the advice on MADP is not inferior than the abstention advice to prevent all-cause mortality and other chronic diseases.