Effect of Basal-Bolus Closed-Loop Co-Administration of Insulin and Pramlintide on Improving the Glycemic Control in Type 1 Diabetes

NCT ID: NCT02814123

Last Updated: 2020-02-17

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

PHASE2

Total Enrollment

28 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2017-01-13

Study Completion Date

2018-07-08

Brief Summary

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The closed-loop delivery system is composed of an insulin pump, a continuous glucose sensor and a dosing algorithm that calculates the insulin dose to infuse based on sensor readings. Pramlintide is a drug and an analog of amylin, a hormone that is co-secreted with insulin in healthy individuals, and is deficient in people with type 1 diabetes. Co-injection of pramlintide with insulin at meal times improves glucose control in type 1 diabetes. Literature data suggests that regular insulin may better match the effect of pramlintide compared to rapid insulin in regulating post-prandial glucose levels.

The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of 3 strategies to control your day-and-night glucose levels:

1. rapid insulin-alone closed-loop delivery;
2. rapid insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery;
3. regular insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery.

The primary hypotheses are:

1. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and fast-acting insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.
2. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and regular insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.

Detailed Description

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The closed-loop delivery system is composed of an insulin pump, a continuous glucose sensor and a dosing algorithm that calculates the insulin dose to infuse based on sensor readings. Pramlintide is a drug and an analog of amylin, a hormone that is co-secreted with insulin in healthy individuals, and is deficient in people with type 1 diabetes. Co-injection of pramlintide with insulin at meal times improves glucose control in type 1 diabetes.

Literature data suggests that the pharmacodynamics of regular insulin may better match the effect of pramlintide compared to the pharmacodynamics of fast-acting insulin. Moreover, the cost of regular insulin is significantly lower than fast-acting insulin. Therefore, if a similar (or better) glucose profile can be achieved with regular insulin-plus-pramlintide compared to fast-acting insulin-plus-pramlintide, then a co-formulation employing regular insulin should be prioritized.

Therefore, in this protocol, we aim to assess the effect of the simultaneous, closed-loop, basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide with insulin at a fixed ratio in controlling glucose levels. In the first experimental arm, we propose to infuse pramlintide with fast-acting insulin. In the second experimental arm, pramlintide will be infused with regular insulin. The control arm will be fast-acting insulin-alone closed-loop system.

The aim of the study is to assess the efficacy of the simultaneous, closed-loop, basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide with fast-acting insulin at a fixed ratio and pramlintide with regular insulin at a fixed ratio in controlling glucose levels compared to fast-acting insulin-alone closed-loop infusion.

The investigators aim to conduct a randomized, three-way, crossover trial to compare the efficacy of 1) fast-acting insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery, 2) regular insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery, and 3) fast-acting insulin-alone closed-loop delivery in regulating glucose levels over a period of 24 hours in a study on adults in inpatient settings. Insulin (fast-acting and regular) and pramlintide are given with fixed ratio (6 µg of pramlintide for each unit of insulin).

Before each 24-hour intervention visit, the participant's insulin therapy (basal rates and insulin-to-carbohydrate ratios) will be optimized for a minimum of 10 days, with a target of 14 days.

There will be a wash-out period of 0 to 42 days between the three intervention arms (termination of 24-hr intervention and start of next optimization period).

The primary hypotheses are:

1. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and fast-acting insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.
2. During closed-loop control, the simultaneous basal-bolus infusion of pramlintide and regular insulin improves glucose control compared to fast-acting insulin-alone infusion.

Conditions

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Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

CROSSOVER

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Rapid Insulin-alone closed-loop delivery

Rapid Insulin will be delivered by subcutaneous infusion. Interventions: 24-hour inpatient intervention Drug: Rapid acting Insulin (aspart, lispro, glulisine)

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

24-hour inpatient intervention

Intervention Type OTHER

Subjects will be admitted at the research facility at 7:30. A cannula will be inserted into an arm or a hand vein for blood sampling purposes. Each 24-hour intervention visit includes 3 standardized meals (8:00, 12:00, and 17:00), an evening snack (21:00) and an overnight stay. The glucose level as measured by the real time sensor will be entered manually into the computer every 10 minutes. The insulin and pramlintide pumps' infusion rates will then be changed manually based on the computer generated recommendation, while still maintaining the ratio. The computer generated recommendations are based on a predictive algorithm.

Rapid Insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery

Rapid insulin and pramlintide will be delivered by subcutaneous infusion using a fixed ratio (6 µg pramlintide/unit insulin).

Interventions: 24-hour inpatient intervention Drug: Rapid acting Insulin (aspart, lispro, glulisine) Drug: Pramlintide

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

24-hour inpatient intervention

Intervention Type OTHER

Subjects will be admitted at the research facility at 7:30. A cannula will be inserted into an arm or a hand vein for blood sampling purposes. Each 24-hour intervention visit includes 3 standardized meals (8:00, 12:00, and 17:00), an evening snack (21:00) and an overnight stay. The glucose level as measured by the real time sensor will be entered manually into the computer every 10 minutes. The insulin and pramlintide pumps' infusion rates will then be changed manually based on the computer generated recommendation, while still maintaining the ratio. The computer generated recommendations are based on a predictive algorithm.

Regular Insulin-plus-pramlintide closed-loop delivery

Regular insulin and pramlintide will be delivered by subcutaneous infusion using a fixed ratio (6 µg pramlintide/unit insulin).

Interventions: 24-hour inpatient intervention Drug: Regular Insulin (humulin R) Drug: Pramlintide

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

24-hour inpatient intervention

Intervention Type OTHER

Subjects will be admitted at the research facility at 7:30. A cannula will be inserted into an arm or a hand vein for blood sampling purposes. Each 24-hour intervention visit includes 3 standardized meals (8:00, 12:00, and 17:00), an evening snack (21:00) and an overnight stay. The glucose level as measured by the real time sensor will be entered manually into the computer every 10 minutes. The insulin and pramlintide pumps' infusion rates will then be changed manually based on the computer generated recommendation, while still maintaining the ratio. The computer generated recommendations are based on a predictive algorithm.

Interventions

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24-hour inpatient intervention

Subjects will be admitted at the research facility at 7:30. A cannula will be inserted into an arm or a hand vein for blood sampling purposes. Each 24-hour intervention visit includes 3 standardized meals (8:00, 12:00, and 17:00), an evening snack (21:00) and an overnight stay. The glucose level as measured by the real time sensor will be entered manually into the computer every 10 minutes. The insulin and pramlintide pumps' infusion rates will then be changed manually based on the computer generated recommendation, while still maintaining the ratio. The computer generated recommendations are based on a predictive algorithm.

Intervention Type OTHER

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Males and females ≥ 18 years of age.
* Clinical diagnosis of type 1 diabetes for at least 12 months. (The diagnosis of type 1 diabetes is based on the investigator's judgment; C peptide level and antibody determinations are not needed.)
* The subject will have been on insulin pump therapy for at least 6 months.
* HbA1c ≤ 10%.

Exclusion Criteria

* Current or ≤ 1 month use of other antihyperglycemic agents (SGLT2, GLP-1, Metformin, Acarbose, etc.…).
* Severe hypoglycemic episode within one month of screening.
* Severe diabetes keto-acidosis episode within one month of screening.
* Planned or ongoing pregnancy.
* Known or suspected allergy to the study drugs.
* Gastroparesis.
* Use of prokinetic drugs that stimulate gastric emptying (domperidone, cisapride, metoclopramide).
* Clinically significant nephropathy, neuropathy or retinopathy as judged by the investigator.
* Recent (\< 6 months) acute macrovascular event e.g. acute coronary syndrome or cardiac surgery.
* Current use of glucocorticoid medication.
* Other serious medical illness likely to interfere with study participation or with the ability to complete the trial by the judgment of the investigator.
* Failure to comply with team's recommendations (e.g. not willing to eat meals/snacks, not willing to change pump parameters, etc.).
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

McGill University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Ahmad Haidar

Assistant Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Ahmad Haidar

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

McGill University

Laurent Legault

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre

Locations

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McGill University Health Centre

Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Site Status

Countries

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Canada

References

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Haidar A, Tsoukas MA, Bernier-Twardy S, Yale JF, Rutkowski J, Bossy A, Pytka E, El Fathi A, Strauss N, Legault L. A Novel Dual-Hormone Insulin-and-Pramlintide Artificial Pancreas for Type 1 Diabetes: A Randomized Controlled Crossover Trial. Diabetes Care. 2020 Mar;43(3):597-606. doi: 10.2337/dc19-1922. Epub 2020 Jan 23.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 31974099 (View on PubMed)

Tsoukas M, Rutkowski J, El-Fathi A, Yale JF, Bernier-Twardy S, Bossy A, Pytka E, Legault L, Haidar A. Accuracy of FreeStyle Libre in Adults with Type 1 Diabetes: The Effect of Sensor Age. Diabetes Technol Ther. 2020 Mar;22(3):203-207. doi: 10.1089/dia.2019.0262. Epub 2020 Jan 23.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 31613140 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Document Type: Informed Consent Form

View Document

Other Identifiers

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MAP-1

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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