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Active clinical trials for "Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1"

Results 701-710 of 2981

Open-label Investigation of the Safety and Effectiveness of DIABECELL® in Patients With Type 1 Diabetes...

Type 1 Diabetes

The purpose of this study is to establish the safety and efficacy of xenotransplantation of DIABECELL® in patients with established type 1 diabetes mellitus

Completed38 enrollment criteria

Closing the Loop in Children and Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes in the Home Setting

Diabetes MellitusDiabetes Mellitus4 more

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is one of the most common chronic childhood diseases requiring lifelong insulin therapy. Children and adolescents with T1D need regular insulin injections or the continuous insulin delivery using an insulin pump in order to keep blood glucose levels normal. We know that keeping blood sugars in the normal range will help prevent longterm diabetes-related complications involving the eyes, kidneys and heart. However, achieving treatment goals can be very difficult as the tighter we try to control blood glucose levels, the greater the risk to develop symptoms and signs of low glucose levels (hypoglycaemia). This is a particular problem at night and one solution is to develop a system whereby the amount of insulin injected is controlled by a computer and is very closely matched to the blood sugar levels on a continuous basis. This can be achieved by what is known as a "closed-loop system" where a small glucose sensor placed under the skin communicates with a computer containing an algorithm that drives an insulin pump. We have been testing such a system in Cambridge over the last five years in children and have found that this system is effective at maintaining tight glucose control and preventing nocturnal hypoglycaemia. More recently the system has been tested in real life conditions in the home setting for three weeks during a pilot single-centre study. The next step is to extend the evaluation of closed-loop over a prolonged period of three months. In the present study we are planning to study 24 young people aged 6-18 years on insulin pump therapy. During three months glucose will be controlled by the computer and during the other three months the subjects will make their own adjustments to the insulin therapy using real-time continuous glucose monitoring. We aim to determine the effect of the computer algorithm in keeping glucose levels between 3.9 and 8 mmol/L (normal levels). Safety evaluation comprises assessment of the frequency of severe hypoglycaemic episodes. Participants' response to the use of the system in terms of lifestyle change, daily diabetes management and fear of hypoglycaemia will be assessed. We will also test for longer term glucose control by measuring glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c).

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Medtronic Minimed Overnight Closed-Loop System

Type 1 Diabetes MellitusAutoimmune Diabetes4 more

To test the function and safety of the Medtronic Overnight Closed Loop (OCL) System in a closely monitored 12 hour overnight inpatient study. Once the safety of the device has been validated we will move the study to an outpatient diabetes camp setting. The camp setting will allow us to obtain pilot efficacy and safety data in a "real-life" environment. We plan to compare the subject control nights to the subject nights on the OCL system to assess the percent of sensor glucose readings in the target range of 70-150 mg/dl. Based on previous research, we anticipate that the use of the OCL system will contribute to a greater percentage of sensor glucose readings in the target range.

Completed16 enrollment criteria

Outpatient Study to Evaluate Safety and Effectiveness of the Low Glucose Suspend Feature

Type 1 Diabetes

Introduction: The purpose of the pivotal In Home study is to collect clinical data on the safety and efficacy of the Paradigm LGS System in the actual use environment and by the intended use population. ASPIRE is a multi-center, in home, randomized parallel adaptive study design with type 1 diabetes. The study will compare A1C and CGM based nocturnal hypoglycemic events in a treatment arm to a control arm. Arms are defined as: Treatment Arm (LGS ON) using Paradigm® VEO™ Pump Control Arm (NO LGS FEATURE ) using Paradigm® Revel™2.0 Pump The study's objectives are two-fold: The first study objective is to demonstrate that home use of Low Glucose Suspend (LGS) is safe and is not associated with glycemic deterioration, as measured by change in A1C from baseline to end of study participation. The second study objective is to demonstrate that home use of Low Glucose Suspend (LGS) is associated with reduction in nocturnal hypoglycemia when patients fail to respond. Primary Safety Endpoint: The change in A1C from randomization to the end of the treatment period will be used to demonstrate that the automatic insulin delivery suspension (LGS ON) does not result in an unacceptable worsening of glycemic control.

Completed45 enrollment criteria

Metabolic Efficiency of Combined Pancreatic Islet and Lung Transplant for the Treatment of End-Stage...

Cystic FibrosisDiabetes Related Cystic Fibrosis1 more

Patients with end-stage cystic fibrosis (CF) and severe CF-related diabetes (CFRD) may benefit from combined lung-pancreatic islet transplantation. A recent case series showed that combined bilateral lung and pancreatic islet transplantation is a viable therapeutic option for patients with end-stage CF and CFRD. The use of different organs from a single donor may lead to reduced immunogenicity. As the prevalence of CFRD has increased dramatically with the improved life expectancy of patients with CF, islet transplantation should be considered at the end-stage CF. By restoring metabolic control, the investigators hypothesize that islet transplantation may improve the management of CF patients undergoing lung transplant and decrease the complication rate in the early postoperative period.

Completed25 enrollment criteria

Sitagliptin Dose Determination Study

Diabetes MellitusType 1

There are many recent advances in insulin treatment of type 1 diabetes, however after a meal sugars are always a concern. There is a drug sitagliptin (Januvia) which is FDA approved to treat people with type 2 diabetes which helps correct their glucoses (sugars) after meals. This study is going to test whether this drug can improve the after meal sugars in people with type 1 diabetes. To test this you will be given a test mixed meal and its effects on insulin, other hormones that affect blood glucose as well as your sugar will be measured by a series of blood tests. Insulin dose will be reduced by 20-50% to prevent low blood sugars which might occur because of food staying longer in the stomach than usual or due to the suppression of a hormone called glucagon which increases blood sugar. If you qualify you will be given sitagliptin (Januvia) 3 different times in 25 mg, 50 mg and 100mg dosages. You and the researchers will not know which dose you are taking at any single visit. A total of 30 people in which some will be children aged 13- 17 and others will be adults aged 18-30 will participate. Some will have had diabetes for over a year, others will be within 3 months of having been found to have type 1 diabetes. Furthermore, only 18-30 year people who are diagnosed with type 1 diabetes for a year or more will be studied initially (4 subjects) to establish safety data before younger subjects are enrolled into the study.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Clinical Assessment of a Closed-loop Insulin Delivery System

Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

The purpose of the study is to assess the safety and efficacy of the Imperial College closed loop insulin delivery system (artificial pancreas) in subjects with type 1 diabetes.

Completed10 enrollment criteria

Metabolic Effects of Honey in Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus

This study aimed at evaluation of the metabolic effects of honey, as a supplemental food, in patients suffering from type 1 diabetes mellitus. A crossover design (two 12-weeks intervention periods) was used to measure honey effects. The subjects were randomized into two groups (intervention to control [I/C] and control to intervention [C/I] groups. Each group consisted of 10 patients. . The subjects in the I/C group consumed 0.5 ml honey/kg/day in the first 12-week period (period 1) while the subjects in the C/I group did not receive honey as a control in period 1. After period 1 the subjects of each group exchanged their protocol for the following 12-week period (period 2).

Completed4 enrollment criteria

Preventing Hypoglycemia During Exercise With Proactive Snacking on Closed Loop

Type 1 Diabetes

This study is designed to look at how snacking during exercise may help prevent low blood sugars while subjects are on the "closed loop artificial pancreas." This system uses a continuous glucose sensor, an insulin pump, and a computer program that automatically determines how much insulin to give based on the sensor glucose level.

Completed18 enrollment criteria

Improving Postprandial Glycaemia by a New Developed Closed-loop Control System - Closedloop4meals...

Diabetes MellitusType 1

Achieving near-normoglycemia has been established as the main objective for most patients with diabetes. However, postprandial glucose control is a challenging issue in everyday diabetes care. Indeed, excessive postprandial glucose excursions are the major contributors to plasma glucose (PG) variability in subjects with type 1 diabetes (T1DM). In addition, the poor reproducibility of postprandial glucose response is burdensome for patients and healthcare professionals. Automatic glucose control, the so-called artificial pancreas or closed-loop system, may represent the ideal solution for reaching the therapeutic goals in diabetic patients. Intuitively, closed-loop insulin delivery may be superior to open-loop insulin delivery due to a better compensation of the variability of subcutaneous insulin absorption and the intra-subject insulin sensitivity. However, several challenges exist to effectively realize an optimal postprandial closed-loop control of blood glucose. Indeed, the eating process induces one of the major glucose perturbations that need to be controlled by an artificial pancreas and is currently one of the main challenges found in clinical validations of the few existing prototypes of an artificial pancreas. In particular, experiments carried out with the currently used algorithms for glucose control (the so called PID and MPC) showed that closed-loop insulin delivery often tend to overcorrect hyperglycemia thus increasing the risk hypoglycemia. In this project, a rigorous clinical testing of a novel closed-loop controller ('artificial pancreas') will be carried out in T1DM patients treated with continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion (CSII). The innovative element of the controller is a safety auxiliary feedback based on sliding mode reference conditioning (SMRC), which has been demonstrated (in simulation studies) to limit over-insulinization and the resulting hypoglycemia, reducing glycaemic variability. Standardized meal test studies will be performed in T1DM subjects treated with CSII, comparing the administration of a classical bolus (open-loop study) with a controller-driven prandial insulin delivery (closed-loop study) based on continuous subcutaneous glucose monitoring (CGM). The hypothesis is that closed loop control will provide better postprandial control, especially in terms of reduction of glucose variability and incidence of hypoglycemia.

Completed20 enrollment criteria
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