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Diabetes Prevention in Hispanic Adults Using Constant Glucose Monitors
NCT06864728 · University of Texas at Austin
In plain English
Click the button to translate this study into plain language — what it is, who qualifies, and what participation looks like.
Official title
The Impact of Social Determinates of Health on Risk for Diabetes in the Hispanic Community: a Pilot Study
About this study
Social determinants of health are associated with developing diabetes mellitus type 2 (diabetes) onset, progression, and adverse outcomes. Hispanics have a 50% lifetime risk of developing diabetes. They also transition from pre-diabetes to diabetes faster and have an earlier onset of diabetes and its complications than the general population. People with a family history of diabetes are 7.6 times more likely to develop diabetes than individuals without such a history. Diabetes research uses hemoglobin A1C (A1C), the accumulation of glucose on hemoglobin molecules during the past three months, as the measure of diabetes control. However, A1C is an insensitive measure of glucose for those at risk for developing diabetes because glucose spikes and variability are often masked in an average glucose level by A1C. Glucose spikes should rarely occur and can be an early indicator of insulin insufficiency. Constant glucose monitors (CGM) can detect glucose spikes and have successfully lowered A1C in people with diabetes.
Using CGM, Hispanic adults with familial risk factors of diabetes can obtain a more detailed assessment of their glucose levels and identify foods, activities, emotions, and stress that impact their glucose levels. Time constraints can often be a barrier to participating in an intervention. The proposed intervention will test an asynchronous nurse-led intervention. To address this gap and create an intervention, glucose variability in Hispanics at risk for diabetes will be investigate to identify glucose variability predictors and create a culturally tailored intervention to prevent diabetes.
Diagnosis of glucose intolerance, or prediabetes, can be evaluated using an oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT) to illustrate a person's ability to produce and use insulin in response to glucose consumption. The medical community uses these lab values as benchmarks. Knowing the starting level of participants' glucose tolerance will allow us to better interpret the CGM findings. Additionally, it will provide validity for using CGMs in the population at risk for diabetes.
Therefore, the specific aims are as follows:
1. To examine the relationship between social determinants and glucose control. These analyses estimate the associations between economic instability, neighborhood vulnerability, food insecurity, and healthcare quality with glucose variability.
2. To determine the feasibility and acceptability of a CGM intervention for Hispanics at risk of diabetes. The study compares synchronous or asynchronous diabetes education intervention. The participants will receive education and feedback based on their CGM results, either in person or via videos.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* self- identify as Hispanic Has a parent diagnosed with diabetes type 2
Exclusion Criteria:
* Pregnant Type 1 diabetes
Study design
Enrollment target: 30 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2025-01-28
Estimated completion: 2026-01-28
Last updated: 2025-03-10
Interventions
Behavioral: Video Diabetes EducationBehavioral: In person or virtual diabetes education
Primary outcomes
- • Diabetes Knowledge (4 weeks)
Sponsor
University of Texas at Austin · other
Contacts & investigators
ContactJulie Zuniga, PhD · contact · jzuniga@nursing.utexas.edu · 5124714696
ContactAlexandra Garcia, PhD · contact
All locations (1)
University of Texas at AustinRecruiting
Austin, Texas, United States