Closed-loop Control of Postprandial Glucose Levels in Children and Adults With Type 1 Diabetes

Sponsor
Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal (Other)
Overall Status
Withdrawn
CT.gov ID
NCT02490098
Collaborator
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (Other)
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Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

Current intensive insulin therapy in T1D involves prandial insulin boluses depending on the carbohydrate content of each ingested meal. Carbohydrate content of ingested meals is the main determinant of post-meal glucose excursion. Therefore, accurate carbohydrate counting is a critical aspect of managing postprandial blood glucose levels in type 1 diabetes in order to avoid too much or too little insulin resulting in hypoglycemia and hyperglycemia, respectively. Precision of carbohydrate counting is associated with better glycemic control. However, accurate carbohydrate counting is a challenging task for many patients with type 1 diabetes. Recent developments of continuous glucose sensors and insulin infusion pumps have motivated the research toward "closed-loop'' strategies to regulate glucose levels in patients with type 1 diabetes. In a closed-loop strategy, the pump insulin infusion rate is altered based on a computer generated recommendation that rely on continuous glucose sensor readings. A dual-hormone closed-loop strategy has also been recently proposed to regulate glucose levels. In a dual-hormone strategy, subcutaneous insulin delivery is accompanied by subcutaneous glucagon infusion. Postprandial meal glucose control with closed-loop strategy still needs some improvements. The objective of this study is to test in outpatient unrestricted settings whether, in the context of closed-loop strategy, conventional meal carbohydrate counting could be reduced to a simplified qualitative meal size estimation without a significant degradation in overall glycemic control in children and adult patients with type 1 diabetes. The investigators hypothesize that 1) dual-hormone closed-loop strategy with qualitative meal size estimation is equivalent to dual-hormone closed-loop strategy with CHO counting in terms of mean glucose; 2) single-hormone closed-loop strategy with qualitative meal size estimation is equivalent to single-hormone closed-loop strategy with CHO counting in terms of mean glucose;

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: 6-day intervention with sensor-augmented pump therapy
  • Other: 6-day intervention with single-hormone closed-loop strategy
  • Other: 6-day intervention with dual-hormone closed-loop strategy
  • Drug: Insulin
  • Drug: Glucagon
  • Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
  • Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
Phase 2

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
0 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Crossover Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
An Open-label, Randomized, Five-way, Cross-over Study to Compare the Efficacy of Single- and Dual-hormone Closed-loop Operations Combined With Either Conventional Carbohydrate Counting or a Simplified Qualitative Meal-size Estimation, and Sensor-augmented Pump Therapy in Regulating Glucose Levels in Children and Adults With Type 1 Diabetes
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Jan 1, 2018
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2018
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2018

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Active Comparator: Single-hormone closed-loop strategy with full boluses

Variable subcutaneous insulin infusion rates will be used to regulate postprandial glucose levels. Patient's usual fast acting insulin analog (Lispro, Aspart or Glulisine) will be infused using a subcutaneous infusion pump (MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic). Every 10 minutes, the glucose levels as measured by the sensor (Enlite sensor®, Medtronic) will be transferred automatically to the Smartphone platform, that harbors the algorithm, that will calculate the recommended doses and will send it wirelessly to the infusion pump. Each subject insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio will be used to calculate the insulin bolus to be given.

Other: 6-day intervention with single-hormone closed-loop strategy
One day prior to the intervention, participants will have to install a glucose sensor and the study insulin pump. On the first day of the intervention, participants will be admitted to the clinical research facility in the morning. A team member will review with the participant how to use study devices. Competency on the use of study devices will be assessed by a team member. Only participants demonstrating competency on use of study devices will be allowed to continue to the home study phase. Participants will be allowed to go home in the afternoon. They will be advised to continue with study intervention at home for the next 5 days. Participants will be asked to install a new infusion set every 2 days. Participants will be allowed to eat whatever they want and allowed to drink alcohol.

Drug: Insulin
Participant's usual fast-acting insulin analog will be used: Lispro (Humalog), Aspart (NovoRapid) or Glulisine (Apidra)

Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
Enlite sensor®, Medtronic

Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic

Active Comparator: Dual-hormone closed-loop strategy with full boluses

Variable subcutaneous insulin and glucagon infusion rates will be used to regulate postprandial glucose levels. Patient's usual fast acting insulin analog (Lispro, Aspart or Glulisine) and Glucagon (Eli Lilly) will be infused using two separate subcutaneous infusion pumps (MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic). Every 10 minutes, the glucose levels as measured by the sensor (Enlite sensor®, Medtronic) will be transferred automatically to the Smartphone platform, that harbors the algorithm, that will calculate the recommended doses and will send it wirelessly to the infusion pumps. Each subject insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio will be used to calculate the insulin bolus to be given.

Other: 6-day intervention with dual-hormone closed-loop strategy
One day prior to the intervention, participants will have to install a glucose sensor and the study insulin pump. On the first day of the intervention, participants will be admitted to the clinical research facility in the morning. Participants will have to install a second pump containing glucagon. A team member will review with the participant how to use study devices. Competency on the use of study devices will be assessed by a team member. Only participants demonstrating competency on use of study devices will be allowed to continue to the home study phase. Participants will be allowed to go home in the afternoon. They will be advised to continue with study intervention at home for the next 5 days. Participants will be asked to install a new infusion set every 2 days. Participants will be allowed to eat whatever they want and allowed to drink alcohol.

Drug: Insulin
Participant's usual fast-acting insulin analog will be used: Lispro (Humalog), Aspart (NovoRapid) or Glulisine (Apidra)

Drug: Glucagon
Glucagon (Eli Lilly) will be used during dual-hormone closed-loop strategy.

Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
Enlite sensor®, Medtronic

Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic

Active Comparator: Single-hormone closed-loop strategy with partial boluses

Variable subcutaneous insulin infusion rates will be used to regulate postprandial glucose levels. Patient's usual fast acting insulin analog (Lispro, Aspart or Glulisine) will be infused using a subcutaneous infusion pump (MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic). Every 10 minutes, the glucose levels as measured by the sensor (Enlite sensor®, Medtronic) will be transferred automatically to the Smartphone platform, that harbors the algorithm, that will calculate the recommended doses and will send it wirelessly to the infusion pump. The partial bolus will be based on the estimated meal size (snack-regular-large-very large). For this strategy, meal size will be defined as: snack as any meal less than 30g, regular meal as any meal between 30g and 60g CHO, large meal as any meal between 60g and 90g CHO, very large meal for anything above 90g CHO. The meal size assessment will be done by the patient.

Other: 6-day intervention with single-hormone closed-loop strategy
One day prior to the intervention, participants will have to install a glucose sensor and the study insulin pump. On the first day of the intervention, participants will be admitted to the clinical research facility in the morning. A team member will review with the participant how to use study devices. Competency on the use of study devices will be assessed by a team member. Only participants demonstrating competency on use of study devices will be allowed to continue to the home study phase. Participants will be allowed to go home in the afternoon. They will be advised to continue with study intervention at home for the next 5 days. Participants will be asked to install a new infusion set every 2 days. Participants will be allowed to eat whatever they want and allowed to drink alcohol.

Drug: Insulin
Participant's usual fast-acting insulin analog will be used: Lispro (Humalog), Aspart (NovoRapid) or Glulisine (Apidra)

Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
Enlite sensor®, Medtronic

Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic

Active Comparator: Dual-hormone closed-loop strategy with partial boluses

Variable subcutaneous insulin and glucagon infusion rates will be used to regulate postprandial glucose levels. Patient's usual fast acting insulin analog (Lispro, Aspart or Guilisine) and Glucagon (Eli Lilly) will be infused using two separate subcutaneous infusion pumps (MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic). Every 10 minutes, the glucose levels as measured by the sensor (Enlite sensor®, Medtronic) will be transferred automatically to the Smartphone platform, that harbors the algorithm, that will calculate the recommended doses and will send it wirelessly to the infusion pumps. The partial bolus will be based on the estimated meal size (snack-regular-large-very large). For this strategy, meal size will be defined as: snack as any meal less than 30g, regular meal as any meal between 30g and 60g CHO, large meal as any meal between 60g and 90g CHO, very large meal for anything above 90g CHO. The meal size assessment will be done by the patient.

Other: 6-day intervention with dual-hormone closed-loop strategy
One day prior to the intervention, participants will have to install a glucose sensor and the study insulin pump. On the first day of the intervention, participants will be admitted to the clinical research facility in the morning. Participants will have to install a second pump containing glucagon. A team member will review with the participant how to use study devices. Competency on the use of study devices will be assessed by a team member. Only participants demonstrating competency on use of study devices will be allowed to continue to the home study phase. Participants will be allowed to go home in the afternoon. They will be advised to continue with study intervention at home for the next 5 days. Participants will be asked to install a new infusion set every 2 days. Participants will be allowed to eat whatever they want and allowed to drink alcohol.

Drug: Insulin
Participant's usual fast-acting insulin analog will be used: Lispro (Humalog), Aspart (NovoRapid) or Glulisine (Apidra)

Drug: Glucagon
Glucagon (Eli Lilly) will be used during dual-hormone closed-loop strategy.

Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
Enlite sensor®, Medtronic

Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic

Active Comparator: Sensor-augmented pump therapy

Subjects will use sensor-augmented pump therapy and freely implement their usual basal rate and CHO-matching full prandial bolus to regulate glucose levels. Patient's usual fast acting insulin analog will be infused using a subcutaneous insulin infusion pump. Each subject insulin-to-carbohydrate ratio will be used to calculate the insulin bolus to be given.

Other: 6-day intervention with sensor-augmented pump therapy
One day prior to the intervention, participants will have to install a glucose sensor and the study insulin pump. Participants will adjust their insulin delivery as per their standard practice; including temporary basal and correction boluses. Participants will have access to their finger-stick glucose measurements and will be advised to measure their glucose level as per their standard practice. Participants will be asked to install a new infusion set every 2 days. Participants will be allowed to eat whatever they want and allowed to drink alcohol. Participants will use sensor-augmented pump therapy for 6 days.

Drug: Insulin
Participant's usual fast-acting insulin analog will be used: Lispro (Humalog), Aspart (NovoRapid) or Glulisine (Apidra)

Device: Continuous Glucose Monitoring System Enlite sensor®, Medtronic
Enlite sensor®, Medtronic

Device: Insulin pump MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic
MiniMed® Paradigm® Veo™, Medtronic

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Mean day-and-night glucose levels [6 days]

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Percentage of time of glucose levels between 4.0 and 8.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  2. Percentage of time of glucose levels between 4.0 and 10.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  3. Percentage of time of glucose levels above 10.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  4. Percentage of time of glucose levels above 14.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  5. Percentage of time of glucose levels spent below 4.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  6. Percentage of time of glucose levels spent below 3.1 mmol/L [6 days]

  7. Area under the curve of glucose values below 4.0 mmol/L [6 days]

  8. Area under the curve of glucose values below 3.1 mmol/L [6 days]

  9. Number of patients with at least one hypoglycemic event below 3.1 mmol/L with or without symptoms [6 days]

  10. Total number of hypoglycemic event below 3.1 mmol/L [6 days]

  11. Total insulin delivery [6 days]

  12. Total glucagon delivery [6 days]

  13. Standard deviation of glucose levels [6 days]

  14. Total carbohydrate intake [6 days]

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
8 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  1. Males and females ≥ 8 years old.

  2. Clinical diagnosis of type 1 diabetes for at least one year.

  3. The subject will have been on insulin pump therapy for at least 3 months and currently using a fast actin insulin analog (Lispro, Aspart or Guilisine).

  4. Last (less than 3 months) HbA1c ≤ 10%.

  5. Currently using carbohydrate counting as the meal insulin dose strategy.

  6. Live in the area of Montreal

Exclusion Criteria:
  1. Clinically significant microvascular complications: nephropathy (estimated glomerular filtration rate below 40 ml/min), neuropathy (especially diagnosed gastroparesis) or severe proliferative retinopathy as judged by the investigator.

  2. Recent (< 3 months) acute macrovascular event e.g. acute coronary syndrome or cardiac surgery.

  3. Pregnancy.

  4. Severe hypoglycemic episode within 1 month of screening.

  5. Agents affecting gastric emptying (Motilium®, Prandase®, Victoza®, Byetta® and Symlin®) as well as oral anti-diabetic agents (Metformin, SGLT-2 inhibitors and DPP-4 inhibitors) if not at a stable dose for 3 months. Otherwise, these medications are acceptable and will be kept stable during the entire protocol.

  6. Oral steroids unless patients present a low stable dose (e.g. 10 mg or less of prednisone per day or physiological doses, less than 35 mg/day, of hydrocortisone Cortef®). Inhale steroids at stable dose in the last month are acceptable.

  7. Other serious medical illness likely to interfere with study participation or with the ability to complete the trial by the judgment of the investigator (e.g. unstable psychiatric condition).

  8. Failure to comply with team's recommendations (e.g. not willing to change pump parameters, follow algorithm's suggestions, etc).

  9. Living or planned travel outside Montreal (> 1h of driving) area during closed-loop procedures.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal Montreal Quebec Canada H2W 1R7

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal
  • Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Rémi Rabasa-Lhoret, Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Rémi Rabasa-Lhoret, Associate Professor of Medicine, Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT02490098
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • CLASS-13
First Posted:
Jul 3, 2015
Last Update Posted:
Oct 27, 2017
Last Verified:
Oct 1, 2017
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Rémi Rabasa-Lhoret, Associate Professor of Medicine, Institut de Recherches Cliniques de Montreal
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Oct 27, 2017