View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes.
Filter by:The main purpose of this study is to assess the safety and efficacy of orforglipron compared with dapagliflozin in improving blood sugar control in participants with type 2 diabetes (T2D) with inadequate glycemic control using metformin. The study will last approximately 46 weeks.
Clinical guidelines from professional organizations have recommended the use of multidose insulin regimens as the preferred therapy for glycaemic control in patients admitted to hospital in a non-intensive-careunit setting. The use of a basal-bolus regimen with a once daily basal insulin and rapid-acting insulin analogs before meals has been shown to improve glycaemic control and to reduce the rate of hospital complications in general medical and surgical patients with type 2 diabetes.The basal-bolus regimen however is labour intensive, requiring several insulin injections, and is associated with a high risk of hypoglycaemia. Hypoglycaemia has been reported in 12% to 32% of patients in general medicine and surgery with type 2 diabetes treated with basal-bolus insulin regimens.Because of these limitations, alternative treatment regimens are needed that could improve glycaemic control and clinical outcomes, while facilitating care and minimising the risk of hypoglycaemia in patients with diabetes.
This is a multicenter, randomized, Open-label Phase 3 clinical study comparing the efficacy and safety of IBI362 6 mg OW versus Semalgutide 1 mg OW in obese(BMI≥28kg/m2) early T2D subjects. Subjects will be randomly assigned to IBI362 6 mg and Semalgutide 1 mg groups. All study treatment will be administered once-weekly and subcutaneously. The entire trial cycle includes a 2-week screening period, a 40-week double-blind treatment period, and a 4-week drug withdrawal safety follow-up period
The overall goal is to determine how a sleep extension intervention (increasing time in bed) in individuals who maintain less than 6.5 hours sleep per night affects their plasma ceramides and insulin sensitivity. Participants will undergo a randomized controlled trial, with sleep extension (intervention) and healthy lifestyle (control) groups. The sleep extension is designed to increase participant's time in bed by 2 hours per night. Alternatively, the control group will receive basic health information (e.g., physical activity, goal setting, and nutrition when eating out).
The overall aim of the present study is to investigate the effectiveness of implementing a 1-year time-restricted eating (TRE)-based intervention on glycaemic control, body weight and composition, cardiometabolic risk factors, and behaviour in individuals with overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D).
This is a multicenter, randomized, parallel, placebo- and active comparator-controlled phase 2 trial to evaluate the efficacy, safety, pharmacokinetics and immunogenicity in subjects with T2DM. Patients treated with diet and exercise alone, or in combination with stable metformin monotherapy (≥1500 mg/day or maximum tolerated dose ≥1000 mg/ day.), will be enrolled. Approximately 225 participants will be randomized. The study includes four stages: screening period (up to 2 weeks), lead-in period (2 weeks), treatment period (12 weeks) and safety follow-up period (3 weeks after treatment).
The overall purpose of the present study is to examine the effect of implementing a 12-month person-centred and culturally sensitive intervention on glycaemic control in individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and a non-Western background. We hypothesise that the intervention added to standard care will be superior for reducing HbA1c. Superiority will be claimed if the baseline corrected difference between the two groups is equal to, or surpass, the minimal important difference (5 mmol/mol) in favour of the intervention-group.
Aerobic exercise and resistance exercise are two types of exercise commonly used in physical conditioning. Compared to aerobic exercise, a combination of aerobic and resistance exercise has been linked to a greater reduction in hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) among patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, it is not clear that in a concurrent aerobic-resistance training session, whether the orders of the two types of exercise could act differently in glucose metabolism. This pilot randomized trial aims to investigate the effect of the sequence of exercise modalities (aerobic-resistance vs resistance-aerobic in a training session) on glycemic control among T2D patients following an 8-wk intervention period. The trial also aims to compare the effects of the two different sequences in blood pressure, sleep quality, and lower limb muscle strength among the T2D population.
This study will investigate the utility of a polypill-based strategy for patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus and high risk of heart failure (HF), as assessed via the WATCH-DM risk score. Polypill therapy will consist of empagliflozin 12.5 mg, losartan 50 or 100 mg, and finerenone 10 mg daily. The study duration is 3 months, and participants will be randomized to either polypill therapy or usual care. The primary outcome is change in peak VO2 and adherence to usual care. The investigators hypothesize that the use of a polypill is feasible and improves medication adherence and peak VO2 as compared to those receiving usual care.
The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility/acceptability of the Diabetes Staging System (DSS) in Patient Aligned Care Teams (PACT) teams and its ability to increase sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) and glucagon-like-1 peptide (GLP-1) use in Veteran patients with type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease and/or chronic kidney disease.