Comparison of Glargine to Degludec Insulin Transition With or Without a Bridging Glargine Dose
Launched by UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON · Nov 4, 2020
Trial Information
Current as of May 07, 2025
Completed
Keywords
ClinConnect Summary
Insulin degludec (IDeg), an ultra-long-acting basal insulin, is increasingly used to treat patients with type 1 diabetes (T1D). IDeg has a half-life of 25 hours and duration of action exceeding 42 hours in patients with T1D and as a result does not require as stringent a dosing schedule as other basal insulins. However, steady state concentration of IDeg is not reached until 2 to 3 doses are administered daily, and this may result in greater glycemic variability in the 24 to 72 hours following the initiation of therapy with IDeg.
Our hypothesis is that among patients who transition from in...
Gender
ALL
Eligibility criteria
- Inclusion Criteria:
- • Patients must meet ALL inclusion criteria to be included in the study.
- • 1. Patient age is 18-75 years.
- • 2. Diagnosis of T1D of at least 1-year duration.
- • 3. Has the ability to provide informed consent before any trial-related activities.
- • 4. Treated with insulin glargine as their basal insulin in the 3 months preceding screening visit.
- • 5. Stable insulin regimen (defined as change of \<20% in the total daily dose of insulin and no change to the basal insulin agent) over the 3 months preceding the screening visit.
- • 6. Patient willing to dose their basal insulin at bedtime.
- • 7. Hemoglobin A1c \< 9% in the 3 months preceding screening visit.
- • 8. Able to self-administer their insulin doses.
- • 9. Able to do self-monitoring of blood glucose using a glucose meter and willing to do this at least 2 times daily for patients using a CGM that requires calibration prior to the study and 4 times daily for patients who were not using a CGM prior to the study.
- • 10. Agreeable to the use of a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) for the duration required in the study. If already using a CGM prior to the study, then agreeable to wearing the blinded study CGM concurrently during the study period.
- • 11. Will be reachable by phone and/or email to comply with study procedures.
- • 12. Will be able to comply with study procedures, per investigator's opinion.
- • 13. Patient agrees to not use correctional insulin unless BG ≥250 for the 48 hours before and after 1st dose of IDeg.
- Exclusion Criteria:
- • Patient must not have ANY of the exclusion criteria to be included in the study.
- • 1. Patients with eGFR \<30 on at least 2 measurements within 1-year of the screening visit.
- • 2. History of myocardial infarction within 6 months preceding the screening visit.
- • 3. Patients taking non-insulin medications for the glycemic management of T1D (including metformin, DPP-4 inhibitors, GLP-1 receptor agonists, SGLT-2 inhibitors, thiazolidinediones, alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, pramlintide)
- • 4. Known or suspected allergy to IDeg or one of its excipients.
- • 5. Pregnant, planning to become pregnant in the next 3 months or breastfeeding.
- • 6. Participation in a clinical trial with investigational drug within 1 month of the screening visit or at present.
- • 7. Skin condition that prevents the insertion of the CGM.
- • 8. Previously randomized and received drug in this study.
- • 9. Presence of decompensated or poorly controlled psychiatric conditions.
- • 10. Current known or suspected illicit substance use.
- • 11. Any anticipated surgery or procedure in the next 14 days.
- • 12. Patients using U-300 glargine as their basal insulin.
- • 13. Patients using insulin afrezza as their short-acting insulin.
- • 14. Use of glucocorticoid burst/pulse therapy within 14 days prior to screening visit (chronic stable glucocorticoid doses are acceptable).
About University Of Washington
The University of Washington (UW) is a leading academic institution renowned for its commitment to advancing healthcare through innovative research and clinical trials. With a robust network of interdisciplinary teams, UW fosters collaboration among top-tier researchers, clinicians, and healthcare professionals, aiming to translate scientific discoveries into impactful treatments and interventions. The university is dedicated to ethical research practices and participant safety, ensuring rigorous adherence to regulatory standards in all clinical trials. Through its state-of-the-art facilities and extensive expertise, UW strives to address pressing health challenges and improve patient outcomes on a local and global scale.
Contacts
Jennifer Cobb
Immunology at National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
Locations
Seattle, Washington, United States
Patients applied
Trial Officials
Arthi Thirumalai, MD
Principal Investigator
University of Washington
Timeline
First submit
Trial launched
Trial updated
Estimated completion
Not reported
Similar Trials