Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus Clinical Trial
Official title:
Propranolol as a Treatment for Impaired Awareness of Hypoglycemia in Type 1 Diabetes
Impaired awareness of hypoglycemia is common in type 1 diabetes (T1DM) patients. Impaired
hypoglycemia awareness increases severe hypoglycemia risk by six-fold. Severe hypoglycemia
compromises quality of life and can potentially cause death. The long-term goal of this pilot
study is to lead to the development of novel therapeutic approaches to improve hypoglycemia
awareness and thus prevent severe hypoglycemia development in T1DM population with impaired
awareness of hypoglycemia.
It is hypothesized that propranolol will improve hypoglycemia recognition in T1DM. The
specific aims of the study are to determine whether propranolol treatment improves subjects'
recognition of hypoglycemic episodes, and improves hypoglycemic awareness scores; whether
propranolol favorably increases hypoglycemia blood glucose nadir, decreases
onset-to-treatment/recovery time (i.e. hypoglycemia duration), and reduces
hypoglycemia/severe hypoglycemia frequency; and, whether propranolol reduces fear of
hypoglycemia and improves overall blood glucose control.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) can lead to serious and devastating complications, including
microvascular (retinopathy, neuropathy and nephropathy) and cardiovascular disease. Both
diabetic microvascular and cardiovascular complications can be reduced with intensive insulin
therapy and strict blood glucose control which target hemoglobin A1C to less than 7%.
However, tighter glycemic control correlates with a higher incidence of hypoglycemia and
severe hypoglycemia. Recurring exposure to hypoglycemia leads to an attenuated
sympathoadrenal response to hypoglycemia (which is termed hypoglycemia-associated autonomic
failure), and thus a loss or decrease in neurogenic hypoglycemic symptoms (i.e. impaired
awareness of hypoglycemia). Impaired awareness of hypoglycemia is associated with a six-fold
increased risk of severe hypoglycemia and physician or patient-directed higher glycemic
goals. Impaired awareness of hypoglycemia is therefore a major barrier in diabetes
management, by precluding optimal glycemic control and realization of its full benefits.
Several therapeutic strategies have been proposed to improve hypoglycemia awareness in T1DM
patients. A temporal increase in glycemic goal only sustains hypoglycemia awareness recovery
for a short-term. Islet transplantation is invasive, extremely expensive and requires
life-long use of immunosuppressants. A widely available and affordable treatment with
sustained efficacy for improving hypoglycemia awareness is therefore in urgent need.
Pharmaceutical agents targeting potential mechanisms that contribute to the development of
impaired hypoglycemia awareness have been proposed, including beta-blockers, opioid receptor
antagonists and selective serotonin uptake inhibitors (SSRIs). However, none of these agents
has been approved for the treatment of impaired hypoglycemia awareness.
The current pilot study will examine the clinical use of beta-blockers, specifically
propranolol, for the treatment of impaired hypoglycemia awareness. In a physiological
condition, hypoglycemia leads to counterregulatory hormone responses, including
catecholamines. Catecholamine elevation mediates the development of neurogenic symptoms,
including palpitation, anxiety and diaphoresis, and patient's recognition of a hypoglycemic
episode. Previous study suggests that recurring hypoglycemic events, potentially through
repeated ventromedial hypothalamus (VMH) noradrenergic system activation, dampen the
counterregulatory hormone response to hypoglycemia. In addition, carvedilol (a non-specific
beta-blocker) prevented hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure development in rats made
recurrently hypoglycemic. Consistent with these findings, propranolol, which crosses blood
brain barrier and blocks beta-2 adrenergic receptors, has been shown to prevent
hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure in healthy human subjects. Thus, an intervention
which can block the propagating mechanism(s) (i.e. repeated activation of beta2-adrenergic
receptors) will likely lead to sympathoadrenal function improvement, and thus increase
hypoglycemic symptoms and hypoglycemia awareness.
Beta-blocker is one of the most extensively used medication classes in the United States, and
has been commonly utilized in diabetes patients for cardiac diseases. Although beta-blocker
may theoretically attenuate hypoglycemic symptoms or lead to worsening of hypoglycemia,
multiple studies have proven that beta-blockers increase hypoglycemic symptoms and can be
safely used in insulin-dependent diabetes patients. In particular, a retrospective study
included more than 13,000 patients and examined the relationship between antihypertensive use
and hypoglycemia, and this study supported that beta-blocker use was not associated with an
increase in severe hypoglycemia. As well, in a recent post-hoc analysis of a large type 2
diabetes intensive insulin therapy study (ACCORD), the group receiving beta-blocker and
intensive insulin therapy had fewer cardiovascular events and comparable all-cause and
cardiovascular death events compared to the group receiving beta-blocker and conventional
therapy; this is thus evident for the safety of beta-blocker usage in patients undergoing
intensive insulin therapy. With the safety data and previous basic/clinical observations, it
is therefore proposed that propranolol is a strong testing candidate for potential
hypoglycemia-associated autonomic failure treatment.
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