Digital Therapeutic Based Investigation to Improve Glycemic Control in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes and Residual Hyperglycemia on Stable Medical Therapy
brief summary
Randomized, controlled, multicenter, pragmatic, pivotal trial with open-label extension evaluating the hypothesis that BT-001 an investigational digital therapeutic intended to help patients with type 2 diabetes improve their glycemic control, will lower hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) compared to a control application added to usual care and across a broad range of patients in a real-world setting
detailed description
This randomized, controlled, multicenter, parallel-arm, pragmatic pivotal trial with extension will evaluate the hypothesis that BT-001 compared to a control application, both on top of usual care, will lower HbA1c in real world clinical practice. Approximately five-hundred (500) adults with type 2 diabetes will be randomized (1:1) to BT-001 or the control application. Most clinical data will be collected via the electronic medical records (EMR) system with limited additional contacts to ascertain adverse device effects (ADEs), adverse events (AEs) and clinical events which may have occurred outside the health system and were not recorded in the EMR. For primary efficacy endpoint assessment, a requisition form for HbA1c at a local laboratory will be provided if HbA1c is not available from the EMR within the 90- and 180-day time windows. During the extension phase, biomarker endpoint data will only be collected from the EMR. For all participants, clinical and healthcare utilization data will be extracted from their EMR for the period from 180 days prior to enrollment to 720 days after enrollment.
official title
Randomized, Controlled, Multicenter, Pragmatic, Trial With Open-label Extension of BT-001 to Improve Glycemic Control in Adults With Type 2 Diabetes in a Real-world Setting