Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Not Yet Recruiting

Not Yet RecruitingNCT07284511

A Clinical Trial Using Tirzepatide to Help Adults With Type 1 Diabetes Automatically Control Their Blood Sugar

Fully Closed-Loop Glucose Control in Adults With Type 1 Diabetes Using Tirzepatide: a Randomized, Multi-center, Open-label, Non-inferiority, Parallel Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
Phase 2 / Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
105 (estimated)
Sponsor
Melissa-Rosina Pasqua · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This research study is testing whether a weekly medication called tirzepatide can help adults with type 1 diabetes use their insulin pump more easily, specifically by reducing or eliminating the need to count carbohydrates at meals. People with type 1 diabetes must take insulin for life, and even with advanced insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitors, many still struggle to keep blood sugar within the target range. One of the biggest challenges is carbohydrate counting, which requires estimating the amount of carbohydrates in every meal to give the correct insulin dose. Tirzepatide is a medication currently approved for type 2 diabetes and weight management. Early research suggests it may also help people with type 1 diabetes by lowering appetite, slowing digestion, reducing insulin needs, and smoothing after-meal blood sugar rises. This study will include 105 adults with type 1 diabetes at centers in Canada and Switzerland. Everyone will use the Tandem Control-IQ insulin pump with a Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitor. Participants are randomly assigned to one of two groups: Tirzepatide group: Participants receive weekly tirzepatide injections. After the dose is gradually increased over 12 weeks, they will eventually try using their insulin pump without entering carbohydrate amounts at meals. Control group: Participants continue their usual therapy and keep counting carbohydrates for their mealtime insulin doses. The main goal of the study is to learn whether people taking tirzepatide can safely maintain good blood sugar control without counting carbs, compared with standard care. All participants will attend several clinic visits and share their glucose, insulin, and health data throughout the 32-week trial. Some centers will also conduct heart/fitness, or body-composition tests. As with any medication, tirzepatide may cause side effects such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or decreased appetite. Rare but serious risks like gallbladder disease or pancreatitis are also monitored. Pregnancy must be avoided during the trial. Overall, this study aims to understand whether adding tirzepatide to automated insulin delivery can simplify diabetes management, reduce burden, and maintain safe and effective glucose control for adults living with type 1 diabetes.

Detailed description

Current diabetes technology, including hybrid automated insulin delivery systems like the Tandem Control-IQ paired with the Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitor, improves glucose control but still relies heavily on patients entering carbohydrate amounts before eating, a task that is difficult, error-prone, and often stressful. Tirzepatide, which is approved for type 2 diabetes and weight management, works by slowing digestion, lowering appetite, reducing insulin requirements, and improving after-meal glucose spikes, and early evidence suggests it may offer similar benefits in type 1 diabetes. This study is designed to determine whether adding once-weekly tirzepatide injections to a commercially available automated insulin delivery system can make diabetes management easier for adults with type 1, particularly by reducing or eliminating the need to count carbohydrates at meals. In this 32-week trial, 105 adults will be randomly assigned to receive tirzepatide or no tirzepatide while all participants use the Control-IQ system. Those receiving tirzepatide will gradually increase their dose over 12 weeks, continue counting carbohydrates until week 26, and then stop announcing meals entirely for the final 6 weeks, while the control group will count carbohydrates throughout. Across the study, participants will attend scheduled clinic visits, complete remote follow-ups, undergo laboratory tests, and, depending on the site, may complete heart function tests, body-composition scans, fitness testing, or gastric emptying assessments. Researchers will compare glucose control, insulin needs, weight, metabolic markers, meal patterns, and patient-reported outcomes between groups, with the primary goal of determining whether glucose management without carbohydrate counting is not worse than (non-inferior to) standard carbohydrate counting. The study also closely monitors safety, as tirzepatide can cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite, and rare complications such as gallbladder disease or pancreatitis. Overall, this research aims to learn whether combining tirzepatide with automated insulin delivery can safely simplify diabetes management, reduce treatment burden, and improve metabolic outcomes for adults living with type 1 diabetes.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGTirzepatideTirzepatide, administered as a once-weekly subcutaneous injection, initiated at 2.5 mg and escalated in 2.5-mg increments every 4 weeks to a target of 10 mg or the maximally tolerated dose, used as an adjunct therapy in adults with type 1 diabetes using the Tandem Control-IQ automated insulin delivery system.
DEVICETandem Control-IQ Automated Insulin Delivery System (with Dexcom G7 CGM)This intervention uses the Tandem t:slim X2 insulin pump with the Control-IQ automated insulin delivery algorithm, integrated with the Dexcom G7 continuous glucose monitor. The system adjusts basal insulin and delivers automated correction boluses based on real-time glucose values. All participants receive standardized training and use this system for the full 32-week study. Rapid-acting insulin compatible with Control-IQ is required. This intervention is distinguished by its use under two different operational strategies: standard carbohydrate counting in the control arm and complete omission of meal announcements during the final 6 weeks in the tirzepatide arm.
BEHAVIORALCarbohydrate CountingParticipants enter the estimated carbohydrate amount for every meal and snack into the Tandem Control-IQ insulin pump to calculate and deliver prandial insulin boluses. This reflects standard use of hybrid closed-loop systems. The procedure is maintained for the entire 32-week study in the control arm and during Weeks 1-26 in the tirzepatide arm.
BEHAVIORALNo Meal AnnouncementParticipants do not enter carbohydrate amounts or announce meals to the Tandem Control-IQ system. The pump operates without user-initiated prandial boluses, relying solely on automated basal adjustments and automated correction boluses. This intervention is implemented only in the tirzepatide arm during Weeks 27-32.

Timeline

Start date
2026-01-05
Primary completion
2028-01-01
Completion
2029-01-01
First posted
2025-12-16
Last updated
2025-12-16

Locations

3 sites across 2 countries: Canada, Switzerland

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07284511. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.