View clinical trials related to Type 2 Diabetes.
Filter by:We propose to conduct a systematic literature review and meta-analysis to assess the association of low-calorie sweetened beverages (LCSBs) on cardiometabolic outcomes in prospective cohort studies. We will be using methodological approaches (change in LCSBs intake, and/or substitution analysis) that attempt to overcome the issue of reverse causality associated with studies of LCSBs and cardiometabolic disease. Ten cardiometabolic outcomes will be assessed: 1. Global adiposity - body weight 2. Global adiposity - BMI 3. Global adiposity - body fat 4. Abdominal adiposity - waist circumference 5. Overweight/obesity incidence 6. Metabolic syndrome incidence 7. Type 2 diabetes incidence 8. Cardiovascular disease incidence 9. Cardiovascular disease mortality 10. Total mortality
The objective of this protocol is to answer the questions: 1) Are financial incentives layered upon nurse education and home telemonitoring superior to nurse education and home telemonitoring alone in improving metabolic control long term? 2) Are the effects of financial incentives on metabolic control sustained once the incentives are withdrawn? and 3) Are financial incentives efficacious within and consistent across racial/ethnic groups? This study provides a unique opportunity to address these gaps in the literature. Investigators propose a randomized controlled trial to test the efficacy of a Financial Incentives And Nurse Coaching to Enhance Diabetes Outcomes (FINANCE-DM) intervention comprised of: 1) nurse education, 2) home telemonitoring, and 3) structured financial incentives; compared to an active control group (nurse education and home telemonitoring alone). The study also will evaluate whether intervention effects are sustained 6 months after the financial incentives are withdrawn (i.e. 18 months post randomization); and whether the intervention is differentially efficacious across racial/ethnic groups.
The objective of this protocol is to evaluate the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of 8 sessions of in-home, telephone-delivered, culturally-modified, manualized diabetes-modified, behavioral activation treatment (Home DM-BAT) delivered by trained diabetes nurse educators among low income, ethnic minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM. The aims of this randomized controlled efficacy trial are: Aim 1: To test the efficacy of Home DM-BAT on clinical outcomes (hemoglobin A1c, blood pressure, and LDL-Cholesterol). Hypothesis 1: Low income, minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM randomized to Home DM-BAT will have significantly greater improvements in clinical outcomes (hemoglobin A1c, blood pressure, and LDL-Cholesterol) at 12 months of follow-up compared to the control group (in-home, telephone-delivered supportive therapy - ST). Aim 2: To test the efficacy of Home DM-BAT on behavioral outcomes (home blood glucose monitoring, diet, exercise and medication adherence) and quality of life. Hypothesis 2: Low income, minority seniors with poorly controlled T2DM randomized to Home DM-BAT will have significantly greater improvements in behavioral outcomes (home blood glucose monitoring, diet, exercise and medication adherence) and quality of life (physical and mental health components of SF-12) at 12 months of follow-up compared to the control group. Aim 3: To determine the cost-effectiveness of Home DM-BAT intervention for diabetes. Hypothesis 3: Home DM-BAT will be more cost-effective in improving hemoglobin A1c levels at 12 months of follow-up, compared to the control group, as measured by differences in program costs, resource utilization, and hemoglobin A1c levels.
The objective of this protocol is to answer the questions: 1) Within food supplementation options, are mailed stock boxes superior to food vouchers in terms of achieving glycemic control? 2) Is the combination of mailed stock boxes and food vouchers superior to either food supplementation option alone? 3) Does providing diabetes education in combination with food supplementation lead to improved clinical outcomes compared to education alone? To address this gap in the literature, we propose a randomized controlled trial to test the separate and combined efficacy of monthly food vouchers to farmers market and monthly mailed food stock boxes layered upon diabetes education in improving glycemic control in low income, food insecure, AAs with Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) using a 2x2 factorial design.
The purpose of this study is to learn if Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter 2 inhibitor (SGLT2i) medications enhance beneficial properties of epicardial adipose tissue including metabolic flexibility, insulin sensitivity, decreased cell size and reduced inflammation.
MODIFY study is a multi-centre prospective, longitudinal, observational cohort study which aims to recruit 150 adult patients with type 2 diabetes recruited from community, primary care or secondary care settings. The total length of the study is 75 months. The aim of the study is to develop an MRI-based method to identify whom amongst people with Type 2 diabetes are at risk of further complications in their kidney, liver and cardiovascular system.
The goal of this study is to address the risk of diabetes among men by creating a Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) tailored to men.
The purpose of this research is to gather data on how exercise can help recovery of muscle mass, strength, and physical function after bedrest in older adults with pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes.
Patients with young onset diabetes (YOD) are one of the most challenging groups of patients due to their long disease duration, complex causes, delayed interventions, psychosocial stress, poor adherence and frequent default. The investigator's previous studies indicate that provision of biogenetic information improved satisfaction, reduced ambiguity and improved self-efficacy in patients with T2D. Provision of personalized information using the web-based Joint Asia Diabetes Evaluation (JADE) Technology with risk stratification and decision support empowers better self care and medical intervention with improved control of risk factors. To further improve the precision of diagnosis for individualizing care, the use of CP, GADA, genetic risk scores (GRS) or rare genetic variants of maturity onset of diabetes (MODY) can help doctors select the most appropriate therapy in a timely manner. While patients with low CP, GADA and high GRS will benefit from early insulin therapy, some MODY variants are associated with good response to insulin-releasing oral drugs (e.g. sulphonylurea) which may spare the use of insulin with reduced patient distress and over-insulinization. By contrast, patients with high CP often due to obesity-associated insulin resistance should undergo intensive lifestyle modification and use of drugs with weight-reducing or neutral effects to avoid weight gain due to excessive dose of insulin.
This is a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study to assess the effect of dapagliflozin add-on intensive lifestyle intervention for remission of type 2 diabetes in obese patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus. The study consists of a 12-months treatment period (in which they will receive either Dapagliflozin plus intensive lifestyle intervention or placebo plus intensive lifestyle intervention in addition to the background therapy), and a 2-month follow-up period after treatment period.