At a glance
ClinicalIndex Comparison RecordStandardized by ClinicalIndex from the ClinicalTrials.gov record · verify against the source.
UAB Diabetes Research Center (DRC): Chronic Disease and the Reduction of Health Disparities Supplement
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Receive lifestyle modification alone and Metformin therapy for Pre-diabetes. Completed, enrolled 36 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Diabetes is responsible for a huge and growing burden of patient suffering and social costs, and the impact of this disease is shared disproportionately by minorities and in rural resource-challenged communities, particularly in the Deep South. To address this problem, the University of Alabama (UAB) Diabetes Research Center (DRC) will establish a primary care clinical network in rural counties of Alabama and in the Mississippi delta that will provide the (DRC) and its members with opportunities for partnership and the infrastructure to conduct translational and clinical research in those patients with the greatest need. A pilot trial will be conducted within the coalition to assess feasibility for a larger trial to evaluate a novel and sustainable approach for diabetes prevention that involves an innovative lifestyle intervention combined with metformin.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Participants will receive a 12-month lifestyle intervention program (telehealth + peer coach). The intervention comprises of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-adapted DPP Prevent Type 2 (PreventT2) lifestyle intervention program consisting of 26 classes delivered by trained health educators via telehealth. Additionally, the peer coach provides ongoing support over 12-months with tapered calls mirroring ongoing classes. Participants are randomized at the practice level. Two clinics will be randomized to receive the lifestyle intervention program alone.
The two other clinics will be randomized to receive the lifestyle intervention program (described above) with METFORMIN therapy recommendations. Participants are randomized at the practice level. The primary care provider at the clinic will prescribe metformin and participants would be encouraged to take it if the primary care provider consider prescribing.