Rationale and design of a cross-sectional study to investigate and describe the chronotype of patients with type 2 diabetes and the effect on glycaemic control: the CODEC study

Author:

Brady Emer M,Hall Andrew P,Baldry EmmaORCID,Chatterjee Sudesna,Daniels Lois J,Edwardson Charlotte,Khunti KamleshORCID,Patel Mubarak I,Henson Joseph J,Rowlands Alex,Smith Alice C,Yates Thomas,Davies Melanie J

Abstract

IntroductionA person’s chronotype is their entrained preference for sleep time within the 24 hours clock. It is described by the well-known concept of the ‘lark’ (early riser) and ‘owl’ (late sleeper). Evidence suggests that the ‘owl’ is metabolically disadvantaged due to the standard organisation of our society which favours the ‘lark’ and places physiological stresses on this chronotype. The aim of this study is to explore cardiometabolic health between the lark and owl in a population with an established metabolic condition - type 2 diabetes.MethodsThis cross-sectional, multisite study aims to recruit 2247 participants from both secondary and primary care settings. The primary objective is to compare glycaemic control between late and early chronotypes. Secondary objectives include determining if late-chronotype is associated with poorer cardiometabolic health and other lifestyle factors, including well-being, compared with early-chronotype; describing the prevalence of the five different chronotypes in this cohort and examining the trends in glycaemic control, cardiometabolic health, well-being and lifestyle factors across chronotype.AnalysisThe primary outcome (glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c)), linear regression analysis will compare HbA1c between early and late chronotypes, with and without adjustment for confounding variables. Chronotype will be modelled as a categorical variable with all five levels (from extreme-morning to extreme-late type), and as a continuous variable to calculate p for trend across the five categories. A number of models will be created; unadjusted through to adjusted with age, sex, ethnicity, body mass index, duration of diabetes, family history of diabetes, current medication and dietary habits. All secondary outcomes will be analysed using the same method.EthicsEthical approval from the West Midlands - Black Country Research Ethics Committee (16/WM/0457).DisseminationThe results will be disseminated through publication in peer-reviewed medical journal, relevant medical/health conferences and a summary report sent to patients.Trial registration numberNCT02973412 (Pre-Results).

Funder

NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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