| Literature DB >> 31164368 |
Gianluca Musolino1,2, Janet M Allen1,2, Sara Hartnell3, Malgorzata E Wilinska1,2, Martin Tauschmann1,4, Charlotte Boughton1, Fiona Campbell5, Louise Denvir6, Nicola Trevelyan7, Paul Wadwa8, Linda DiMeglio9, Bruce A Buckingham10, Stuart Weinzimer11, Carlo L Acerini1,2, Korey Hood10, Steven Fox12, Craig Kollman13, Judy Sibayan13, Sarah Borgman13, Peiyao Cheng13, Roman Hovorka1,2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Closed-loop systems titrate insulin based on sensor glucose levels, providing novel means to reduce the risk of hypoglycaemia while improving glycaemic control. We will assess effectiveness of 6-month day-and-night closed-loop insulin delivery compared with usual care (conventional or sensor-augmented pump therapy) in children and adolescents with type 1 diabetes. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The trial adopts an open-label, multicentre, multinational (UK and USA), randomised, single-period, parallel design. Participants (n=130) are children and adolescents (aged ≥6 and <19 years) with type 1 diabetes for at least 1 year, and insulin pump use for at least 3 months with suboptimal glycaemic control (glycated haemoglobin ≥58 mmol/mol (7.5%) and ≤86 mmol/mol (10%)). After a 2-3 week run-in period, participants will be randomised to 6-month use of hybrid closed-loop insulin delivery, or to usual care. Analyses will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis. The primary outcome is glycated haemoglobin at 6 months. Other key endpoints include time in the target glucose range (3.9-10 mmol/L, 70-180 mg/dL), mean sensor glucose and time spent above and below target. Secondary outcomes include SD and coefficient of variation of sensor glucose levels, time with sensor glucose levels <3.5 mmol/L (63 mg/dL) and <3.0 mmol/L (54 mg/dL), area under the curve of glucose <3.5 mmol/L (63 mg/dL), time with glucose levels >16.7 mmol/L (300 mg/dL), area under the curve of glucose >10.0 mmol/L (180 mg/dL), total, basal and bolus insulin dose, body mass index z-score and blood pressure. Cognitive, emotional and behavioural characteristics of participants and caregivers and their responses to the closed-loop and clinical trial will be assessed. An incremental cost-effectiveness ratio for closed-loop will be estimated. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Cambridge South Research Ethics Committee and Jaeb Center for Health Research Institutional Review Office approved the study. The findings will be disseminated by peer-review publications and conference presentations. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02925299; Pre-results. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: artificial pancreas; closed-loop; type 1 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31164368 PMCID: PMC6561428 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027856
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flowchart. HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; CGM, continuous glucose monitoring.
Figure 2FlorenceM closed-loop system prototype. The system consists of a continuous glucose monitoring transmitter with Guardian 3 sensor (Medtronic), an insulin pump (modified 640G pump, Medtronic) and an Android smartphone running the control algorithm (Cambridge).
Schedule of study visits/phone contacts when the participant is randomised to day-and-night closed-loop combined with low-glucose feature (intervention group)
| Visit/contact | Description | Start relative to previous/next visit/activity | Duration (hours) | |
| Run-in | Visit 1 | Recruitment visit: consent, HbA1c, screening bloods, urine pregnancy test, baseline surveys, blinded CGM training and insertion | 1–4 | |
| Visit 2 | Review of baseline bloods, pump settings and CGM data; adjustment of treatment | 2 weeks after visit 1 (+1 week); run-in could be repeated | 1–2 | |
| Training | Visit 3 | Randomisation, repeat HbA1c if visit 3 and visit 1 are >28 days apart, urine pregnancy test, study pump training and initiation, competency assessment | May coincide with visit 2, within 8 weeks of visit 1 | 3–4 |
| Visit 3a | Real-time CGM training and initiation, competency assessment | Within 0–7 days of visit 3 (visit 3a may coincide with visit 3; training visits can be repeated) | 2–4 | |
| CL + LGS | Visit 4 | CL initiation at clinic/home: data download, CL and low-glucose feature training, competency assessment, blinded CGM | 4 weeks after randomisation (±1 week) | 2–6 |
| Contact 1 | Review use of study devices; study update | Within 24–48 hours after visit 4 | <1 | |
| Visit 5† | Review use of study devices; study update | 1 week after visit 4 (±3 days) | <1 | |
| Contact 2 | Review use of study devices; study update | 2 weeks after visit 4 (±3 days) | <1 | |
| Contact 3 | Review use of study devices; study update | 1 month after visit 4 (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Contact 4 | Review use of study devices; study update | 2 months after visit 4 (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Visit 6 | 3 month visit: HbA1c, urine pregnancy test, data download, blinded CGM, surveys | 4 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | 1–3 | |
| Contact 5 | Review use of study devices; study update | 5 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Contact 6 | Review use of study devices; study update | 6 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Visit 7 | Blinded CGM | 2–4 weeks before planned visit 8 | <0.5 | |
| Visit 8 | End of closed-loop treatment arm (6 months of CL): HbA1c, data download, surveys and focus groups; resume usual pump therapy | 7 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | 1–3 |
*In-person clinic visit mandatory in USA only.
†Could be done via phone/email in UK. In-person visit mandatory in USA only.
CGM, continuous glucose monitoring; CL, closed-loop; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; LGS, low-glucose suspend.
Schedule of study visits/phone contacts when the participant is randomised to usual care (conventional or sensor-augmented insulin pump therapy) (control group)
| Visit/contact | Description | Start relative to previous/next visit/activity | Duration (hours) | |
| Run-in | Visit 1 | Recruitment visit: consent, HbA1c, screening bloods, urine pregnancy test, baseline surveys, blinded CGM training and insertion | 1–4 | |
| Visit 2 | Review of baseline bloods, pump settings and CGM data; adjustment of treatment | 2 weeks after visit 1 (+1 week); run-in could be repeated | 1–2 | |
| Training period | Visit 3 | Randomisation, repeat HbA1c if visit 3 and visit 1 are >28 days apart, urine pregnancy test, insulin pump refresher training, competency assessment | May coincide with visit 2, within 8 weeks of visit 1 | 3–4 |
| Usual insulin pump therapy | Visit 4 | Initiation of standard therapy arm at clinic/home, glucometer download, recording of current insulin requirements, blinded CGM | 4 weeks after randomisation (±1 week) | 2–6 |
| Contact 1 | Study update | Within 24–48 hours after visit 4 | <1 | |
| Visit 5 | Study update | 1 week after visit 4 (±3 days) | <1 | |
| Contact 2 | Study update | 2 weeks after visit 4 (±3 days) | <1 | |
| Contact 3 | Study update | 1 month after visit 4 (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Contact 4 | Study update | 2 months after visit 4 (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Visit 6 | 3-month visit: HbA1c, urine pregnancy test, glucometer download, recording of current insulin requirements, surveys, blinded CGM | 4 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | 1–3 | |
| Contact 5 | Study update | 5 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Contact 6 | Study update | 6 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | <1 | |
| Visit 7 | Blinded CGM | 2–4 weeks before planned visit 8 | <0.5 | |
| Visit 8 | End of standard pump therapy treatment arm (6 months): HbA1c, glucometer download, recording of current insulin requirements, surveys and focus groups, resume usual care | 7 months after randomisation (±2 weeks) | 1–3 |
*In-person clinic visit mandatory in USA only.
†Could be done via phone/email.
CGM, continuous glucose monitoring; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin.