Type 1 Diabetes is the most common life-long disorder with onset in childhood. Patients need insulin injections, blood sugar monitoring several times each day, and adhere to a strict diet. Adequate control of blood glucose is essential to prevent long term kidney and eye complications that result in kidney failure and blindness. Adolescence is a time when diabetes is difficult to control, due in part to high growth hormone levels causing insulin resistance ( a state where the body does not respond as strongly to insulin). This study will test whether treatment with rosiglitazone (an oral medication used frequently in type 2 diabetes) will reduce the insulin resistance of adolescence and improve the control of type 1 diabetes during puberty.
Official Title
The Addition of Rosiglitazone to Insulin in Adolescents With Type 1 Diabetes and Poor Glycaemic Control: a Randomized, Placebo Controlled Trial
Conditions
Type 1 Diabetes
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Treatment, Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo Control, Crossover Assignment, Safety/Efficacy Study
Further Details
Primary Outcome Measures:
- HbA1c
Secondary Outcome Measures:
- insulin dose
- frequency of severe hypoglycaemia
- insulin sensitivity assessed by euglycaemic, hyperinsulinaemic clamp
- weight
- BMI-SDS
- skin fold thickness
- cholesterol
- adiponectin
- Ages Eligible for Study: 10 Years – 18 Years
- Genders Eligible for Study: Both
- T1DM duration > 1year
- age 10-18years
- HbA1c > 8%
- puberty > Tanner stage 2 breast or testis >4ml
- known non-compliance
- hypo unaware
Study Start
August 2003; Study completion: September 2005
Eligibility & Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
Exclusion Criteria:
Total Enrolment
32
Contact Details
Sydney Children’s Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, 2038, Australia
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