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Active clinical trials for "Diabetes Mellitus"

Results 491-500 of 9947

A Randomized Controlled Trial of Diabetes Screening Immediately Postpartum (DIP)

Pre-Gestational DiabetesType2diabetes5 more

To conduct a pragmatic, non-blinded randomized controlled trial (pRCT) of immediate in-patient postpartum OGTT prior to delivery discharge (intervention) versus 4-12 week outpatient postpartum OGTT (current standard care) to improve the frequency of post-partum diabetes screening among individuals with a pregnancy complicated by GDM.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Mobile Diabetes Prevention for Hispanics Living in Rural Areas

Type 2 Diabetes

The goal of this Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) is to test the effectiveness of a mobile, web-based diabetes prevention program for Hispanics living in rural communities. The main question it aims to answer is: Does STEPS, a mobile, web-based diabetes prevention program, reduce the risk of Type II Diabetes in rural Hispanics compared to usual care? Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either the mobile STEPS intervention or usual care for a total of three months. Researchers will compare percentage weight loss, and additional outcome measures in participants of both groups at months three and six post-baseline.

Recruiting16 enrollment criteria

Telehealth Lifestyle Program for Black Adolescent Girls at Risk for Type 2 Diabetes

ObesityChildhood1 more

The aim of this study is to look at changes in diabetes-related risk factors in Black adolescent girls who are at risk for type 2 diabetes after participating in a 12-wk telehealth lifestyle program.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Identification of Human Biomarkers Predictive of Diabetes Remission in Type 2 Diabetes Patient (BARIAKINES)...

Type 2 Diabetes

This study focuses on identifying potentially predictive human circulating adipocyte and muscle biomarkers of diabetes remission after bariatric surgery in obese type 2 diabetic (T2D) subjects.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

A Study of Cardiovascular Events iN Diabetes Plus

Diabetes MellitusType 2

ASCEND PLUS is testing whether, for people with type 2 diabetes who have not previously had a heart attack or stroke, regularly taking a tablet called semaglutide can safely help to reduce heart attacks, strokes, mini-strokes, the need for any procedures to unblock or bypass an artery to their heart, and the chance of dying because of vascular problems.

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

Improving HbA1c Levels Through Behavioural Change of Diabetes Self-management Assisted by the LovedBy...

Diabetes MellitusType 1

Young people (16-25) with type-1 diabetes have historically struggled with managing their condition. Typically, the average HbA1c levels are significantly higher and as such, the risk of long term complications tend to be far greater. These sufferers tend to have better management of their condition as they grow older however, the evidence suggests this is too late and these sufferers will likely have some complications later in life. Current cost to the NHS for complications is ~£850 million and expected to rise to ~£1.3 billion in the next 10-15 years. The LovedBy solution aims to leverage modern technologies such as smartphones, continuous glucose monitors (CGM), and other smart wearables to assist young sufferers managing their condition. The LovedBy platform offers a mobile application which connects to the user's smart wearables and CGM to monitor data streams that have been linked to long term risk. The mobile application is then able to deliver personally relevant educational content to the user through numerous channels including private social media messages. The study will last 10 months, and the participants are required to download/install the mobile app, integrate their wearables and then simply continue as normal with regular clinical meetings. Participants will be between 16-25 years and comply with the inclusion criteria set out in the protocol.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

Preventing Diabetes in Latino Families

Type 2 DiabetesObesity1 more

Purpose: This study will test the efficacy of a family-focused lifestyle intervention for reducing type 2 diabetes (T2D) risk factors and increasing Quality of Life (QoL) among high-risk Latino families.

Recruiting17 enrollment criteria

SomaSignal Tests on Medical Management and Change in Risk in Patients With Diabetes

Diabetes MellitusType 2

Despite the development of novel treatments, cardiovascular disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of death and disability. It has been observed in clinical practice, that the use of novel glycemia-lowering therapies with cardioprotective features remains profoundly low despite proven efficacy. It has been proposed that such low uptake is more related to insurance type and coverage than to risk assessment. While it can be easy to blame prescribing deficiencies on complacent physicians and/or over-frugal payors, SomaLogic believes there is more likely to be a fundamental problem with the cost and risk-effective allocation of such therapies, which are neither low in cost nor free of adverse events. As current clinical trials and guidelines tend to "bundle" participants together, there is an absence of individualized assessment of residual cardiovascular risk. This leads to physicians, participants, and payors being relatively uninformed as to the need for and/or likely benefits of such therapies in an individual. Simply giving every eligible participant a drug regardless of residual risk would be unaffordable and would create adverse effects and costs for people at low residual risk who might not actually benefit from the drugs. To resolve this lack of precision in risk assessment, SomaLogic has performed the largest ever proteomic program to date with over 36,000 samples from 26,000 participants in eleven clinical studies, for a total of over 180,000,000 protein measurements, to develop and validate a surrogate proteomic endpoint for cardiovascular outcomes. The SomaSignal Cardiovascular Risk (SSCVR) test, a 27-protein model encompassing ten biological systems.

Recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Healthy Eating in Women at Risk of Gestational Diabetes

Gestational DiabetesPregnancy Complications

Healthy eating during pregnancy has favorable effects on markers related to diabetes (glucose tolerance) and is associated with lower gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) risk. The cornerstone of GDM treatment is nutrition therapy but the latter often starts late in pregnancy and thus may not have the expected effects on glucose tolerance. What if an intervention promoting healthy eating was initiated at the beginning of pregnancy in all women at risk, would it improve glucose homeostasis? To answer this important question, the investigators will perform a randomized controlled trial in 120 pregnant women. Women receiving the nutritional intervention will be compared to a control group receiving standard care. The nutritional intervention, which will start in the first trimester, is based on the 2019 Canada's Food Guide and is composed of 4 individual sessions with a registered dietitian (12, 18, 24 and 30 weeks). Between those follow-ups, informative nutritional web capsules and phone calls with the registered dietitian will be provided. To ensure that the women remain motivated and receive social support, a private Facebook group will be used. The investigators hypothesize that the nutritional intervention will be effective at improving glucose homeostasis. The investigators expect the results will show the importance of nutritional care starting early in pregnancy in women at risk of GDM.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

mHealth Intervention to Increase Physical Activity in Prediabetes and Type 2 Diabetes

Type 2 DiabetesPreDiabetes

Sedentary behaviour has a detrimental effect on the mortality, morbidity, and well-being of patients with type 2 diabetes and prediabetes, and general practitioners should advise patients on how to self-monitor and increase their physical activity. The emergence of mobile health (mHealth) technologies unlocks the potential to further improve physical behaviour using an innovative "just-in-time" adaptive approach whereby behavioural support is provided in real-time, based on data from wearable sensors. Thus, the investigators aim to evaluate the effect of a just-in-time mHealth intervention administered by general practitioners on the physical activity and sedentary behaviour of patients with type 2 diabetes and prediabetes. A total of 340 patients will be recruited from 20 general practices across the Czech Republic and randomly assigned to either an active control or intervention group. Both groups will receive brief physical activity advice from their general practitioners and a Fitbit fitness tracker to self-monitor their daily steps, but the intervention group will also receive a mHealth-enabled just-in-time adaptive intervention and regular monthly phone counselling in the first 6 months. The mHealth intervention will be delivered using a custom-developed system (HealthReact) connected to the Fitbit that will trigger just-in-time text messages. For example, a prompt to take a break from sedentary behaviour will be triggered after 30 sedentary minutes or a motivational message with a specific goal to take more steps will be triggered when the total step count is too low. The primary outcome will be the change in daily step count at 6 months, other outcomes include changes in other physical behaviour measures, blood tests, anthropometry and patient-reported outcomes at 6 and 12 months. If the intervention is effective, this study will provide a model of health prevention that can be directly implemented and commissioned within primary care using existing infrastructure.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria
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