Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04770532

A Research Study to Compare Two Types of Insulin, a New Weekly Insulin, Insulin Icodec and an Available Daily Insulin, Insulin Degludec, in People With Type 2 Diabetes Who Use Daily Insulin

A 26-week Trial Comparing the Effect and Safety of Once Weekly Insulin Icodec and Once Daily Insulin Degludec, Both With or Without Non-insulin Anti-diabetic Drugs, in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes Treated With Basal Insulin

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
526 (actual)
Sponsor
Novo Nordisk A/S · Industry
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study compares insulin icodec (a new insulin taken once a week) to insulin degludec (an insulin taken once daily which is already available on the market) in people with type 2 diabetes. The study will look at how well insulin icodec taken weekly controls blood sugar compared to insulin degludec taken daily. Participants will either get insulin icodec that participants will have to inject once a week on the same day of the week or insulin degludec that participants will have to inject once a day at the same time every day. Which treatment participants get is decided by chance. The insulin is injected with a needle in a skin fold in the thigh, upper arm or stomach. The study will last for about 8 months. Participants will have 17 clinic visits and 13 phone calls with the study doctor. At 8 clinic visits participants will have blood samples taken. At 4 clinic visits participants cannot eat or drink (except for water) for 8 hours before the visit. Participants will be asked to wear a sensor that measures their blood sugar all the time in 3 periods for a total of 13 weeks (about 3 months) during the study. Women cannot take part if pregnant, breast-feeding or plan to become pregnant during the study period.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGInsulin degludecParticipants will receive subcutaneous (s.c.) injections of insulin degludec once daily for 26 weeks
DRUGInsulin IcodecParticipants will receive subcutaneous (s.c.) injections of insulin icodec once weekly for 26 weeks

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-05
Primary completion
2022-01-27
Completion
2022-03-01
First posted
2021-02-25
Last updated
2025-12-15
Results posted
2025-02-20

Locations

88 sites across 9 countries: United States, Bulgaria, Germany, Japan, Poland, Portugal, South Africa, South Korea, Ukraine

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04770532. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.