Assessment of the Impact of Real-Time Continuous Glucose Monitoring on People Presenting With Severe Hypoglycaemia

NCT ID: NCT03748433

Last Updated: 2024-03-22

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

TERMINATED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

35 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2019-01-03

Study Completion Date

2021-09-09

Brief Summary

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This study aims to assess the impact of real-time continuous glucose monitoring on the frequency, duration, awareness and severity of hypoglycaemia in people with type 1 diabetes and a recent history of severe hypoglycaemia, compared to usual care.

Detailed Description

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Type 1 diabetes (T1DM), which affects 300,000 in the UK, is characterised by autoimmune destruction of the pancreatic beta cells, leading to absolute deficiency of insulin. Management of T1DM requires exogenous insulin administration, aiming for glucose concentrations as close to physiological values as possible. Intensive management of T1DM improves glucose control and reduces the risk of microvascular diabetes complications and cardiovascular disease1. In the UK diabetes consumes more than 10% of the National Health Service budget 2 and in the USA a relatively greater amount is spent on type 1 compared with type 2 diabetes (8.6% of the diabetes budget compared with 5.6% of diabetes prevalence)3. Medication and insulin pump therapy accounts for less than 10% of diabetes expenditure with the majority of costs incurred in the treatment of complications4.

Optimal control remains challenging to achieve and intensive insulin treatment increases the risk of severe hypoglycaemia, with lower glucose values also associated with an increased frequency and severity of moderate hypoglycaemia5, 6. Severe hypoglycaemia is defined as any episode of hypoglycaemia requiring the assistance of a third party actively to treat. Hypoglycaemia is associated with morbidity and even mortality, and places a financial burden on health systems.

Severe hypoglycaemia costs £13million per year in NHS costs7. Between 4 and 10% of deaths in people with type 1 diabetes are attributed to hypoglycaemia and the risk of severe hypoglycaemia increases 6-fold in people with impaired awareness of hypoglycaemia. Avoidance of hypoglycaemia is associated with restoration of hypoglycaemia awareness and this may be enabled by the use of continuous glucose monitoring.

In type 1 diabetes real-time continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) improves overall glucose control in all age groups when used continuously, reduces hypoglycaemia in people with an HbA1c \<7.0%, and may reduce severe hypoglycaemia8-10.

The predictive Low-Glucose suspend (PLGS) feature in sensor augmented insulin pumps (SAP) automatically reduces insulin delivery when trends in CGM glucose concentrations predict future hypoglycaemia, and significantly reduces hypoglycaemia without rebound hyperglycaemia compared to SAP without PLGS11.

In England continuous glucose monitoring is supported by NICE for people with type 1 diabetes who are willing to commit to using it at least 70% of the time and to calibrate it as needed, and who have any of the following despite optimised use of insulin therapy and conventional blood glucose monitoring12:

* More than 1 episode a year of severe hypoglycaemia with no obvious preventable precipitating cause.
* Complete loss of awareness of hypoglycaemia.
* Frequent (more than 2 episodes a week) asymptomatic hypoglycaemia that is causing problems with daily activities.
* Extreme fear of hypoglycaemia.
* Hyperglycaemia (HbA1c level of 75 mmol/mol \[9%\] or higher) that persists despite testing at least 10 times a day

Addressing severe hypoglycaemia, reducing the risk of further episodes and acting promptly to optimise hypoglycaemia awareness are critical in people at high risk.

Continuous subcutaneous insulin pump therapy is supported for adults and children over 12 with type 1 diabetes in whom attempts to achieve target haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) with multiple daily injections (MDI) have resulted in disabling hypoglycaemia or HbA1c levels have remained high (8.5% \[69 mmol/mol\] or above) despite high level care12.

Conditions

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Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 Hypoglycemia Unawareness Hypoglycemia

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Randomised open-label parallel group study
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM)

The RT CGM group will receive a Dexcom G6 transmitter and sensors, as well as a structured education refresher focusing on hypoglycaemia avoidance, recognition, and management.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Dexcom G6 CGM

Intervention Type DEVICE

Commercially available Dexcom G6 Continuous Glucose Monitoring

Self Monitoring Blood Glucose (SMBG)

The SMBG group will additionally undergo blinded CGM at weeks 1 and 2, weeks 4 to 6 and weeks 9 to 12 using the Dexcom G6 system. Participants in this group will be shown how to insert the Dexcom G6 at the first clinic visit and sensors provided so they can do this at home.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Continuous Subcutaneous Insulin Infusion (CSII)

All participants will be re-consented with the choice to continue using RT-CGM for a further 16 weeks or be re-randomised to either receive the Tandem t:slim X2 insulin pump or RT-CGM. Participants randomised to the Tandem t:slim X2 group will be proficiently trained to safely use the Tandem t:slim X2 insulin pump. All participants (Tandem t:slim X2 and RT-CGM) will be provided with Dexcom G6 real time CGM transmitters and sensors for the 16-week second extension phase.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Dexcom G6 CGM

Intervention Type DEVICE

Commercially available Dexcom G6 Continuous Glucose Monitoring

Tandem t:slim X2 Insulin Pump

Intervention Type DEVICE

sensor augmented insulin pump with predictive low glucose suspend

Interventions

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Dexcom G6 CGM

Commercially available Dexcom G6 Continuous Glucose Monitoring

Intervention Type DEVICE

Tandem t:slim X2 Insulin Pump

sensor augmented insulin pump with predictive low glucose suspend

Intervention Type DEVICE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Adults over 18 years of age
* Severe hypoglycaemia requiring ambulance call-out or emergency department attendance within 2 weeks
* Type 1 diabetes confirmed on the basis of clinical features
* Type 1 diabetes for greater than 3 years

Exclusion Criteria

* Use of CGM within the last 6 months (except short periods of diagnostic blinded use under clinic supervision). Prior use of Abbott FreeStyle Libre Device is permitted.
* Use of pre-mixed insulin
* No access to smartphone or computer
* Pregnant or planning pregnancy
* Breastfeeding
* Have active malignancy or under investigation for malignancy
* Severe visual impairment
* Reduced manual dexterity
* Unable to participate due to other factors, as assessed by the Chief Investigators

WITHDRAWAL CRITERIA

Participants will be withdrawn if their ability to give informed consent is impaired. Participants will also be withdrawn, at the chief investigators discretion, if glucose control is negatively impacted by the use of either intervention.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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London Ambulance Service

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Imperial College London

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Nick Oliver

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Imperial College London

Locations

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Imperial College Clinical Research Facility

London, , United Kingdom

Site Status

Countries

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United Kingdom

References

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Avari P, Ramli R, Reddy M, Oliver N, Fothergill R. Rationale and protocol for the Assessment of Impact of Real-time Continuous Glucose Monitoring on people presenting with severe Hypoglycaemia (AIR-CGM) study. BMC Endocr Disord. 2019 Oct 26;19(1):110. doi: 10.1186/s12902-019-0439-3.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 31655586 (View on PubMed)

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Related Links

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Other Identifiers

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18HH4609

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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