Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Phase IIa Dose Escalation Pilot Study to Investigate the Safety and Tolerability of Intranasal Insulin in Subjects With Diabetic Polyneuropathy.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of intranasal insulin in people with type 1 diabetes and diabetic peripheral neuropathy and to determine whether intranasal insulin is effective in slowing the progression of diabetic neuropathy.
Diabetic polyneuropathy (DPN) is a common complication of human type I and II diabetes
mellitus, identified in up to 50% of diabetic subjects regardless of age or type of
diabetes. As the global burden of diabetes heightens due to an epidemic of type II diabetes,
the prevalence of DPN will concurrently rise. Clinical features of DPN include loss of
sensation, propensity towards traumatic wound formation, neuropathic pain, motor weakness
and falls.
At this time there is no specific therapy to arrest or reverse DPN. Previous work has
demonstrated not only an absolute reduction in plasma insulin levels in Type I diabetes but
also in type II diabetics. At the present, therapy for neuropathic pain associated with DPN
is available, but only targets symptom relief and is only partially effective.
Intranasal insulin administration is a novel approach to the treatment of diabetic
polyneuropathy (DPN) based on robust basic science research. Intranasal insulin is currently
being studied in other conditions and has completed Phase II in subjects with cognitive
impairment and mild Alzheimer's disease. Intranasal administration of insulin results in
increased penetration into the cerebrospinal fluid and the peripheral nervous system while
avoiding systemic absorption. Lack of systemic absorption results in maintenance of normal
blood glucose levels in normal healthy subjects.
The objectives of the current study are as follows:
1. Primary: To determine the safety and tolerability of intranasal insulin delivery in
subjects with type 1 diabetes and DPN.
2. Secondary: To determine whether intranasal insulin is efficacious in slowing the
progression of DPN.
This study is designed as a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized, controlled-dose
escalation phase 2 pilot clinical trial.
The duration of the study for each subject is 11 weeks with 6 weeks of blinded study
treatment. The study treatment is either active study drug (Novolin Toronto insulin) or
placebo (normal saline).
The phases of the study are as follows:
1. Screening phase (3 weeks): Potential subjects undergo screening procedures to determine
eligibility. Procedures include informed consent, review of medical history,
anthropometric measures, vital signs, physical examination (including a neurological
assessment), and bloodwork.
2. Baseline phase (2 weeks): Eligibility of subjects is confirmed and subjects commence
collection of protocol-specified blood glucoses on a daily basis. Nerve conduction
tests and corneal confocal microscopy is completed prior to the start of the next
phase.
3. Treatment phase (6 weeks): Subjects commence the study treatment at the lowest
protocol-specified dose. If assigned to Novolin Toronto insulin, this is 20
international units (IU) twice daily (BID). Return visits to the clinic occur every two
weeks for dose escalation. The dose increase is 40 IU BID, then 80 IU BID. Subjects
assigned to normal saline receive a volume equivalent to the total volume given to the
subjects taking insulin. Visits during the treatment phase also include safety
bloodwork, serial blood glucose measurements every 15 minutes for a 2 hour period,
review of any hypoglycemia, adverse events, changes to concomitant medications,
assessment of neuropathy, questionnaires, teaching, and study treatment
accountability/compliance assessment. The study completes at the 11 week time period,
immediately prior to which the second nerve conduction study and corneal confocal
microscopy is completed.
The study protocol is designed to monitor hypoglycemia throughout the baseline and treatment
period for all subjects. Any severe hypoglycemia or significant increases in hypoglycemia
(>30% compared to the baseline phase) will be reviewed by the Investigator on a case-by-case
basis to determine continuation with study treatment. Any subject that undergoes
discontinuation of study treatment will be continued to be followed to 11 weeks (without
study treatment).
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Prevention
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