Overview
The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate if blood glucose responses are similar between and within individuals in response to standardized exercise in adults with and without Type 1 diabetes. The main questions it aims to answer are:
What is the reproducibility of acute glycaemic responses to exercise within and between subjects in adults living with Type 1 Diabetes and in healthy adults? What is the agreement between glucose levels obtained by continuous glucose monitor (CGM) and blood glucose monitor?
Participants will cycle on a cycle ergometer or rest after consuming a standardized breakfast, while glucose levels are monitored by CGM and capillary blood sampling.
Description
This study follows a non-blinded randomized replicate crossover study design. The study involves two phases, one phase will involve participants with T1D and the other phase will involve healthy adults. The sample size will be approximately 12 in each phase. Both phases will follow the same protocol consisting of 2 arms (exercise (EX) and rest).
Participants will attend 5 visits in total in the laboratory. They will first undergo baseline assessments and maximal exercise testing before being randomized to receive either an exercise (EX) or resting (REST) condition at their visit first. The two visits will then repeated to assess reproducibility of the outcomes in the same order the following week (EX RE and REST RE). All test visits will be separated by a minimum washout period of 72 hours.
The first visit will last approximately 1 hour and involves signing informed consent, body composition assessment (BodPod), maximal exercise testing (Vo2 max) and completion of questionnaires.
Before each condition, participants are asked to refrain from strenuous physical activity and alcohol for at least 24 hours prior to the test(s). Prior to the first main testing day (either EX or RE based on randomization), participants are asked to record their dietary intake for 24h and asked to replicate it in the same period before the subsequent conditions.
Testing visits have a duration of 2 hours each. Participants will arrive at the laboratory after an overnight fast always at the same time in the morning (about 9am). While seated, baseline measurements will be collected, including 2 blood glucose measurements via finger prick, 2 CGM measurements, RPE, HR, measures of heart rate variability (HRV), and participants will the intensity of any hypoglycaemia-related symptoms using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). The same measurements will be repeated at regular intervals throughout the visit.
Participants were then provided with a standardized breakfast meal (60g of CHO) that they were instructed to consume within 10 minutes. After consumption of the breakfast, a clock was started. Participants remained seated for 30 minutes, and - during the EX condition - cycled on a cycle ergometer for 30 minutes at an intensity equivalent to 10% above VT. Sixty minutes of rest sitting on a chair follow the 30-minute cycle, before participants can leave the laboratory.
The procedure for the resting condition visits is identical to that of the exercise condition, with the only difference being that the 30-minute cycling session is replaced by an additional 30 minutes of seated rest. This ensures that the total duration of the session and the timing of all measurements remains consistent across conditions.
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria:
(Healthy and T1D phases):
- age between 18 and 60 years old;
- being healthy individuals;
- engagement in physical activity at least once a week; (T1D phase):
- diagnosis of T1D for >18 months;
- hypoglycaemia self awareness.
Exclusion Criteria:
(Healthy and T1D phases)
- presence of cardiovascular disease or contraindications to exercise;
- infectious or inflammatory conditions;
- chronic renal or liver disease;
- pregnancy;
- gestational diabetes;
- diagnosed eating disorders;
- any physical or mental condition preventing participation; (Healthy phase)
- diabetes mellitus (type 1 or type 2); (T1D phase)
- inability to self-manage diabetes.