Abstract

Background: Insulin resistance is an under-recognised cardiovascular risk factor in type 1 diabetes (T1D). Individuals with T1D exhibit insulin resistance relative to those without diabetes. In T1D, tissue-specific insulin resistance (muscle, hepatic, adipose) is likely to partly drive increased cardiovascular risk. Adjunctive metformin improves muscle insulin sensitivity in T1D adolescents, but factors that predict responsiveness remain unknown.Objective: To report the rationale and design of the INTIMET study, a double-blind randomised, placebo-controlled trial of metformin in T1D.Methods: Forty adults aged 20-50 years with T1D, and 20 age- gender- and BMI- matched non-diabetic controls will be studied. T1D inclusion criteria are diagnosis > 10 years, HbA1c 9.5% and fasting C-peptide < 0.3nmol/L. Liver and muscle insulin sensitivity will be determined by the 2-stage hyperinsulinemic (20 and 60 mUm2)-euglycemic (5.5 mmol/L) clamp method with deuterated glucose. Subjects with T1D will be randomised to metformin extended-release 1500mg/d or matched placebo for 26 weeks. The primary endpoint is the change in hepatic insulin sensitivity, measured by suppression of endogenous glucose production (EGP) with the low-dose insulin clamp. Secondary endpoints include change in muscle and adipose tissue insulin sensitivity, arterial stiffness, HbA1c, glucose variability, frequency of hypoglycemia, insulin dose, anthropometry, body composition, lipid profile, liver fat and stiffness. Conclusion: The INTIMET study will quantify muscle, liver and adipose insulin-resistance in T1D, determine whether metformin is effective in improving insulin resistance in T1D and identify factors that predict metformin-responsiveness.The trial is registered (Australian New Zealand Clinical Trial Registry, ACTRN12619001440112) and is actively recruiting in Sydney, Australia.

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