Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) Clinical Trials

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Health Behavior Intervention for Adults With Type 1 Diabetes

Status: Recruiting
Location: See location...
Intervention Type: Behavioral
Study Type: Interventional
Study Phase: Not Applicable
SUMMARY

Type 1 diabetes (T1D) affects approximately 2 million Americans, and only 2 in 8 young adults ages 18-31 years achieve glycemic targets (glycated hemoglobin A1C \<7.0%). Achieving glycemic targets is associated with reduced risk of micro-and macrovascular complications. Sleep deprivation leads to impaired glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity in adults without chronic conditions and with T1D. Promoting sleep in laboratory and natural environments contributes to improvements in insulin sensitivity, glucose levels, and distress symptoms in young adults without chronic conditions and more time in range in adolescents with T1D. Multiple dimensions of sleep health (alertness, timing, efficiency, and sleep duration) are associated with better achievement of glycemic targets in adults with T1D. Therefore, sleep health dimensions are appropriate therapeutic targets to improve glucoregulation and other diabetes self-management outcomes in this population. Our primary objective is to evaluate the immediate and short-term effects of a 12-week CB-sleep intervention compared to enhanced usual care (time balanced attention control) on actigraphy- and self-report derived sleep health dimensions and diabetes self-management outcomes (glycemia and distress symptoms) over 9-months (Stage II of the NIH Model for Behavior Change, ORBIT phase III). CB-sleep is guided by principles and practices from motivational interviewing and the Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change with interactive stage-matched sessions.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 18
Maximum Age: 40
Healthy Volunteers: f
View:

• Aged 18 to 40 years

• Type 1 Diabetes at least 1 year

• One or more sleep health dimension out of range

Locations
United States
Georgia
Emory University
RECRUITING
Atlanta
Contact Information
Primary
Stephanie Griggs, PhD
Stephanie.griggs2@emory.edu
404-544-9915
Time Frame
Start Date: 2023-12-20
Estimated Completion Date: 2028-12
Participants
Target number of participants: 300
Treatments
Experimental: CB-sleep
Initial instruction for the CB-sleep intervention will occur 60-minute telehealth session. The initial action planning session with a sleep report and booster sessions will be interactive and stage matched. The intervention will include an interactive PowerPoint with the participant's clinician sleep report with personalized feedback. They will be encouraged to systematically extend their time in bed by 1 hour and maintain the extension on both weekends and weekdays. Weekly titration will occur according to the following parameters: if sleep efficiency is ≥ 85%, time in bed is increased by 15 minutes per week until a total of a 1 hour increase in time in bed is achieved, if sleep efficiency is \<85%, time in bed remains the same. There will be weekly follow-ups (email, phone, text, video chat) and telehealth 4-week booster sessions. Sleep reports generated by the baseline actigraphy report will be shared with participants with brief action planning and goal setting.
No_intervention: Attention Control Enhanced Usual Care arm
After baseline, the RA assigned to this condition will schedule a 60-minute telehealth appointment to provide instruction for enhanced usual care at the initial consultation visit via contact at T1 (60-minute telehealth session in a private location). The time-balanced follow-up sessions will remain neutral and focused on health perceptions, current plan of care, and relationship building as opposed to the CB-sleep condition's focus on sleep promotion and extension. The RA assigned to the control condition will ask participants to (a) describe how they are doing and (b) ask how confident they are in achieving the goals they have set for themselves. These calls will help to build a relationship with participants to promote study retention. The investigators recognize that participants may obtain self-initiated diabetes self-management in this group, which will vary and will use a Diabetes Self-Management Tracking Form to monitor weekly information acquisition.
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Leads: Emory University

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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