December 19, 2025
Leads:
Carol Levy – Mt. Sinai (Adult)
Emily Coppedge – Cornell (Peds
Participants: Viral Shah, Timothy Bol, Don Buckingham, Marissa Contento, Lauren Golden, Marina Basina, Sarah Dempsey, Arati Nagarkar, Amanda Perkins, Margaret Grillo, Erin Cobry, Abha Choudhary, Hailee Delsart, Lauren Waterman.
Meeting Agenda:
- Welcome
- Presentation by, Viral Shah, MD (Indiana University)
- Topic: Off-label Use of Adjunctive Therapies with Hybrid Closed Loop
- Discussion on current best practices recently implemented
Introduction
- Shah will focus on GLP-1 therapies but is open to discussing SGLT therapies as well.
- The presentation will cover:
- Why are adjunct therapies needed.
- Available options.
- Best Practices.
Why Adjunct Therapies are Needed
- ADA standard of care acknowledges the availability of adjunct therapies.
- A1C target of less than 7% is not achieved by the majority of patients, even with AID (Automated Insulin Delivery) systems.
- Colorado study (2012-2021) examined A1C levels achieved with different technologies.
- Patients using CGM (Continuous Glucose Monitoring) but not AID: 44% achieved A1C less than 7%.
- Patients using AID: 51% achieved A1C less than 7% (7% improvement at the population level).
- AID systems are effective at nighttime, but daytime management remains challenging due to food, exercise, and other factors.
- Obesity prevalence is increasing in type 1 diabetes, mirroring the general population.
- The mean BMI in the T1D exchange is 27 (overweight).
- CVD (Cardiovascular Disease) mortality is high in type 1 diabetes.
- Swedish data shows a decrease in adjusted standardized incidence rate, but a significant difference remains compared to individuals without diabetes.
- Life expectancy for people with type 1 diabetes is about a decade less than the general population.
- Question raised about comparison of CVD death rates between type 1 and type 2 diabetes, and whether duration of diabetes was normalized in studies.
Adjunctive Therapies in Type 1 Diabetes
- Any therapy used in type 2 diabetes could theoretically be used in type 1 diabetes.
- A literature review of metformin and DPP4 inhibitors was conducted. At the time, there weren’t many studies on SGLT2 inhibitors.
- Metformin:
- A1C and weight reduction were neutral.
- Some studies showed improved insulin resistance and reduced surrogate cardiovascular measures.
- No significant difference in carotid intima, media thickness, or pulse wave velocity compared to placebo.
- DPP4 Inhibitors:
- Few studies, generally neutral in terms of glycemic efficacy.
- No studies on surrogate cardiovascular outcomes in type 1 diabetes.
SGLT2 Inhibitors
- SGLT2 inhibitors have a bright future with continuous ketone monitoring (CKM).
- NIH and Abbott are funding studies to use CKM to mitigate DKA risk with SGLT2 inhibitors in type 1 diabetes.
- Studies are being conducted by Rich Birkenstall and Jennifer Scheer, among others.
- Studies have not started yet due to the current environment.
Issues with Liraglutide Trials
- There were issues with the liraglutide trials, including aggressive insulin dose reductions.
- Many sites had less experience, leading to potential issues with patient management.
- Some felt that people were too aggressively reducing the doses.
- Some sites did not have anyone flipping to DKA.
Adjunct 1 and 2 Studies Learnings
- The red highlights are corrected in allele surpassed T1, D1, and 2.
- CGM is essential for insulin titration, and AID is even better.
- Adjunctive therapy should be considered once patients are on an AID system for safety.
- GLP1 doses and insulin dose titration should be flexible.
- Adjunct 1 had forced titration, causing issues like severe GI problems and ketotic events.
- Frequent insulin dose adjustments are necessary, especially in the first six weeks.
Side Effects Analysis
- Lower BMI (less than 27), longer diabetes duration (more than 25 years), lower daily insulin dose, and undetectable C peptides were associated with higher adverse events and discontinuation.
- This is a post hoc analysis, and there’s no mechanistic explanation.
- Lower BMI may indicate a lower threshold for tolerating side effects for weight loss.
- Longer diabetes duration and lower C peptide levels may indicate underlying gastroparesis.
Semaglutide Trial Design
- Trial design considered factors from previous analyses.
- Inclusion criteria:
- Adults with type 1 diabetes for over a year.
- AID use for more than three months.
- A1C of 7-10%. BMI of 30 kg/m^2 or more.
- Multi-center, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial funded by Breakthrough T1D, with drugs provided by Novo Nordisk.
- Protocol was written before COVID and underwent six revisions with Novo Nordisk.
- Initial funding fell through due to legal requirements for multi-center studies.
- Novo Nordisk provided the drug after Breakthrough T1D provided funding.
- The trial used Ozempic at 1 mg per week because Wigovy wasn’t an option at the time.
Insulin Titration Recommendation
- Published an insulin titration recommendation similar to the algorithm used in the Semaglutide study.
- The recommendation is for Medtronic 670, 780 OmniPort 5, and Tandem Control IQ pumps.
- Titration should be based on baseline A1C:
- A1C > 8%: Goal is to reduce A1C.
- A1C 7-8%: Reduce insulin by about 20%.
- A1C < 7%: Reduce insulin up to 30% or more for renal/cardiovascular benefits.
- Focus on key settings in AID systems:
- Medtronic 7 AEG: Target 100 EIT of two.
- Recommend updating weight in Tandem Control IQ if weight loss is more than 5-10%.
- Islet: Recommend rebooting the system due to increased insulin sensitivity.
Primary Outcome
- The study used a composite primary outcome: time in range of more than 70%, time below range of less than 4%, and reduction of body weight of more than 5%.
- 36% in the semaglutide group achieved the primary outcome vs. 0% in the placebo group.
- The number needed to treat was three.
- A1C was similar between groups: 7.8% vs 7.7%.
- There was a 0.8% reduction in the semaglutide group and 0.5% in the placebo group, with an adjusted difference of 0.3.
- Shah notes an unexplained A1C drop in the placebo group between weeks 20-26.
Time in Range and Weight
- Significant improvement in time in range with semaglutide.
- Weight was approximately 9 kg lower in the semaglutide group at the end of the study, with no change in the placebo group.
- Glycemic effects of semaglutide are profound early on, with A1C stabilizing after a few weeks at 1 mg dose, while weight loss continues.
- One participant on placebo was convinced they were on semaglutide, requested 1mg prescription after the trial ended, and ended up in the hospital due to intolerance.
Insulin Dose Reduction
- A paper on insulin dose reduction has been accepted in diabetes care.
- The study aimed to determine how much of the reduction is due to weight loss versus the drug itself, using mediation analysis.
- 80% or higher reduction in insulin requirement is purely due to an effect of drug.
- Reduction in carbohydrate intake was only 30 grams per day.
- The assumption is that baseline data is consistent throughout the study period.
Insulin Titration Guidance
- Reducing insulin by 20-30% upfront when starting a GLP (2.5 mg tirzepatide or 0.25 mg semaglutide) is sufficient.
- GLP may have a secretary effect on beta cells, leading to a significant reduction in total insulin in the first four weeks.
- The effect at two weeks is almost the same as at four weeks in terms of insulin reduction.
- Planning to do a C-peptide analysis to assess changes over time.
- The data from the study will be made publicly available in a couple of months.
Semaglutide Use in Older Type 1 Patients
- Emily from Cornell has used semaglutide in older type 1 patients (16-18 years old) who were obese and poorly controlled.
- These patients were post-pubertal.
- Lauren Waterman from the BDC is doing work on this in adolescents and young adults.
Ongoing Studies
- Yale’s Jennifer Sherr’s group is doing a clamp study in young adults.
- Tennessee is combining semaglutide with teplizumab in stage 2 type 1 diabetes.
- It is not clear if they are doing a clamp.
- A UK study, in collaboration with SUNY Upstate New York, will use both SGLT2 and GLP1 together.
- Half of the recruitment will be in the UK, half in the US.
- This trial is funded by Breakthrough T1D.
- Lilly has clamp data on GIP only in type 1 diabetes, but it is not published.
- The SURPASS T1D 1 and 2 trials are ongoing for 52 weeks.
- The SURPASS T1D 1 26-week trial is doing MMTT in everyone at baseline.
Presentation: GLP-1RA in T1D_T1DX 2025
Recording: Hybrid Closed Loop Working Group-20251219_140308-Meeting Recording.mp4

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