GLPwatch

Exenatide and Impaired Hypoglycaemic Awareness in Type 1 Diabetes

NCT02735031 · Completed

Last updated 2026-05-28

This clinical trial is testing whether the medication exenatide can help people with type 1 diabetes and reduced awareness of low blood sugar respond better to low blood sugar events.

Status Completed The study has finished.
Phase Phase2, Phase3
Type Interventional (clinical trial)
Design Randomized, quadruple-blind treatment study
Participants 10 people
Who can join Ages 18–70 · all sexes
Timeline Started 2017-02 · est. completion 2018-04
Where 1 site · Netherlands

What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02735031 ↗

Description as written by the study sponsor.

Approximately 25% of patients with type 1 diabetes have lost the capacity to timely detect hypoglycaemia, a condition referred to as impaired hypoglycaemic awareness (IHA) that causes a six-fold higher risk of severe, potentially hazardous, hypoglycaemia. IHA is usually the end-result of a process of habituation to recurrent hypoglycemia that is potentially reversible. Treatment with glucagon-like peptide (GLP)-1 Receptor Agonists (1RAs) in addition to insulin therapy may decrease the incidence of hypoglycaemia in patients with type 1 diabetes. This study will test the hypothesis that treatment with the GLP-1RA, exenatide, added to basal-bolus insulin therapy will improve awareness of hypoglycaemia in patients with type 1 diabetes and IHA. In a randomized doubleblind placebo-controlled cross-over trial, patients will be treated for 6 weeks with exenatide (or placebo), after which hypoglycemic symptoms and counterregulatory hormone responses will be examined during a hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemic glucose clamp study.

Treatments tested

Main thing measuredSymptom score in response to insulin-induced hypoglycaemia
SponsorRadboud University Medical Center
Conditions studiedDiabetes Mellitus, Type 1, Hypoglycemia
GLP-1 drugs exenatide

Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02735031 ↗