The single most advanced drug-based study into Type 1 diabetes
On World Diabetes Day a new pioneering global trial will commence to improve treatment of type 1 diabetes.
The TTT1 trial – funded by JDRF
The leading global organisation funding type 1 diabetes research, and co-led by State University of New York – will begin in Scotland in early 2020 and aims to help the overwhelming number of individuals with the condition for whom blood glucose (sugar) is still not controlled to target levels, despite improvements in technology including insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitoring.
Trial aims to address the gap in current treatment
The TTT-1 trial is led by the University of Glasgow’s global leader Dr John Petrie, Professor of Diabetic Medicine. The trial aims to address a gap in current diabetes treatment, which sees a majority of people on insulin therapy with HbA1c above the recommended target of 7%, indicating high blood glucose over the previous two to three months.
The trial will assess a new combination therapy with insulin, balancing the effects of two drugs called dapagliflozin and semaglutide.
Dapagliflozin (Forxiga), as well as a drug related to semaglutide called liraglutide (Victoza), can improve control in adults with type 1 diabetes.
Dapagliflozin has recently been approved for this purpose in the UK and Europe; however, neither drug alone consistently gets most people with type 1 diabetes to the recommended target HbA1c.
Professor Petrie said:
“The hope is to use the combination therapy of dapagliflozin and semaglutide to reduce HbA1c to less than 7% in the majority of people with type 1 diabetes; and since these drugs have benefits for the heart and can also induce weight loss, there may be additional advantages of this drug combination, which would be very positive for those with the condition.
“In addition, both dapagliflozin and semaglutide are likely to reduce unpredictable fluctuations in blood glucose levels, thus providing a greater sense of security for people with type 1 diabetes, substantially improving quality of life.”
Rachel Connor, Director of Research Partnerships at JDRF, said:
“Type 1 diabetes is a really challenging condition to manage, and the limitations of the tools we have today, both technologies and medicines, mean that many people living with the condition struggle to achieve the glucose management targets recommended by doctors.
“We’re proud to support the TTT1 trial and are hopeful that this will lead to a new way to help people with type 1 reduce HbA1c and so also reduce their risk of developing long term complications.”
About type 1 diabetes
- It is a chronic, life-threatening condition that has a life-long impact on those diagnosed with it and their families.
- It is an autoimmune condition which cannot be prevented, and is not linked to lifestyle
- People rely on multiple insulin injections or pump infusions every day just to stay alive, until we find the cure
- It stays with people for the rest of their lives
- It affects about 400,000 people in the UK, 29,000 of them children
- A child diagnosed at the age of five faces up to 19,000 injections and 50,000 finger prick blood tests by the time they are 18
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