← Browse by Condition
Medical Condition

type 1 diabetes t1d

Total Trials
6
Recruiting Now
6
Trial Phases
Phase 2, Phase 3

Diabetes clinical trials span both type 1 (autoimmune beta-cell destruction) and type 2 (insulin resistance) disease, with growing focus on the overlapping spectrum including latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA) and monogenic forms. Research priorities include beta-cell preservation in newly diagnosed type 1 patients, weight-loss-independent glucose control, and prevention of cardiovascular and renal complications.

Current trials evaluate GLP-1/GIP dual agonists (tirzepatide analogs), oral insulin formulations, closed-loop artificial pancreas systems, immunotherapy for type 1 delay, SGLT2 inhibitors in non-diabetic heart failure, and stem-cell-derived islet transplantation. Lifestyle intervention trials also remain an active category.

Many trials separate type 1 and type 2 cohorts; baseline HbA1c, duration of disease, and eGFR are common eligibility criteria.

Disease Burden & Epidemiology

Diabetes mellitus affects approximately 537 million adults worldwide as of 2021 — roughly 1 in 10 adults globally — and projections from the International Diabetes Federation estimate 783 million cases by 2045 if current trends continue. Type 2 diabetes accounts for 90–95% of cases and is strongly linked to obesity, physical inactivity, and aging populations. Type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune condition typically diagnosed in childhood and adolescence, affects approximately 8.4 million people globally, with incidence rising 2–3% annually in high-income countries for reasons that remain incompletely understood. Diabetes is the leading cause of blindness, kidney failure requiring dialysis, and non-traumatic lower-limb amputation in adults in most developed countries. Cardiovascular disease kills approximately half of all people with diabetes. Economic costs are staggering: the International Diabetes Federation estimated global diabetes-related health expenditure at $966 billion in 2021. The rise of GLP-1 receptor agonists and SGLT2 inhibitors — both validated through landmark randomized controlled trials — has fundamentally changed the metabolic disease treatment paradigm and created an active second-generation drug development pipeline.

Key Research Trends & Landmark Studies

The UKPDS trial, conducted over more than 20 years, established intensive glycemic control as beneficial for microvascular complications in type 2 diabetes and remains a landmark in the field. The EMPA-REG OUTCOME and CANVAS trials demonstrated that SGLT2 inhibitors reduce cardiovascular mortality in patients with established atherosclerotic disease, establishing this drug class as the standard of care in high-risk type 2 diabetes. The LEADER and SUSTAIN-6 trials subsequently showed cardiovascular and renal benefits for GLP-1 receptor agonists liraglutide and semaglutide, culminating in the FLOW trial demonstrating that semaglutide reduces the risk of kidney disease progression by 24%. For type 1 diabetes, the Teplizumab MPC-031-004 trial produced the first-ever disease-modifying result: anti-CD3 immunotherapy delayed clinical diagnosis by a median of 2 years in at-risk individuals, leading to FDA approval of teplizumab (Tzield) for stage 2 type 1 diabetes prevention. The CREATE trial is currently evaluating stem-cell-derived islet transplants without immunosuppression using encapsulation technology β€” potentially transformative for type 1 patients.

Patient Guide: How to Find & Join a Trial

People with type 1 or type 2 diabetes can participate in trials at nearly any stage of disease, from prevention in at-risk individuals to management of advanced complications. Before searching for trials, know your key parameters: HbA1c (most recent, within 3 months), eGFR (kidney function), duration of diabetes, current medications, and any complications such as retinopathy or neuropathy — these determine eligibility for the majority of trials. Type 1 patients with recent diagnosis (within 1–2 years) may qualify for beta-cell preservation immunotherapy trials. Patients with type 2 diabetes and high cardiovascular risk or established kidney disease should specifically search for SGLT2 and GLP-1 combination trials in their treatment line. Technology-focused trials testing automated insulin delivery systems (closed-loop or hybrid closed-loop) typically recruit through endocrinology centers with dedicated diabetes technology programs.

Frequently Asked Questions — type 1 diabetes t1d Clinical Trials

How many clinical trials are currently recruiting for type 1 diabetes t1d?
ClinicalMetric currently tracks 6 actively recruiting clinical trials for type 1 diabetes t1d, sourced in real time from ClinicalTrials.gov. The total number of registered studies—including those not yet enrolling or in active follow-up—is 6. Trial availability changes daily as new studies open enrollment and existing ones reach capacity.
What trial phases are available for type 1 diabetes t1d?
type 1 diabetes t1d research spans Phase 2 (1 trial), Phase 3 (1 trial). Phase 1 studies evaluate safety and dosing in small groups, Phase 2 studies assess preliminary efficacy in 100–300 participants, and Phase 3 trials compare the new treatment against the standard of care in 300–3,000+ patients. Phase 4 post-approval studies monitor long-term outcomes in real-world populations.
How do I find out if I qualify for a type 1 diabetes t1d clinical trial?
Eligibility criteria for type 1 diabetes t1d trials vary by study and typically specify age range, disease stage or severity, prior treatment history, and specific diagnostic or laboratory parameters. Each listing on ClinicalMetric links to the full protocol on ClinicalTrials.gov, where inclusion and exclusion criteria are documented. Contact the sponsoring site's research coordinator directly to confirm your eligibility—your treating physician or specialist can also help identify the most appropriate trial based on your medical history and current treatment status.
Trial Phases
Phase 2
1
Phase 3
1
Top Sponsors
University of Colorado, Denver 1 trial
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center 1 trial
University of Chicago 1 trial
University of Virginia 1 trial
University Hospital, Strasbourg, France 1 trial

Recruiting Clinical Trials

NCT07011147
Recruiting
Primary Care Pragmatic, Real World Experience for Automated Insulin Delivery
Enrollment
240 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
University of Colorado, Denver
View Trial →
NCT07154251
Recruiting
Utilizing Community Health Workers as Diabetes Technology Coaches for Children With Type 1 Diabetes Using Automated Insulin Delivery
Enrollment
16 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
University Hospitals Cleveland...
View Trial →
NCT06915831
Recruiting
Type 1 Diabetes and Obstructive Sleep Apnea
Enrollment
40 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
University of Chicago
View Trial →
NCT07186660 Phase 2
Recruiting
Evaluation of a Novel Insulin Sensitizer in People With Type 1 Diabetes
Enrollment
40 pts
Location
United States
Sponsor
University of Virginia
View Trial →
NCT07470593
Recruiting
Study of Glucose Tolerance Abnormalities Using Continuous Glucose Monitoring for the Identification of Early Loss of Pancreatic Islet Graft Function.
Enrollment
36 pts
Location
France
Sponsor
University Hospital, Strasbour...
View Trial →
NCT06630585 Phase 3
Recruiting
GIP/GLP-1RA as Adjunctive to Automated Insulin Delivery in Adults With Type 1 Diabetes
Enrollment
42 pts
Location
Switzerland
Sponsor
University of Bern
View Trial →

Related Conditions

type 2 diabetes (1) diabetes autoimmune (1) diabetes mellitus (1) diabetes mellitus type 2 (1) diabetes mellitus type i (1) diabetes type ii (1) diabetes (1) diabetes mellitus insulin dependent (1) diabetes mellitus type ii (1) diabetes type 2 on insulin (1) sleep apnea obstructive (1) glycemic control for diabetes mellitus (1)
ClinicalMetric — Independent clinical trial intelligence platform. Not affiliated with NIH, ClinicalTrials.gov, the U.S. FDA, or any pharmaceutical company, hospital, or clinical research organization. Trial data is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Do not make any treatment, enrollment, or health decisions based solely on information found here — always consult a qualified healthcare professional. Full Disclaimer  ·  Last Reviewed: April 2026  ·  Data Methodology