Congestive Heart Failure Clinical Trial
Official title:
Attenuating Insulin Resistance as a Therapeutic Target in the Management of Heart Failure
This study will evaluate the safety and effectiveness of the drug rosiglitazone for improving
heart function in patients with heart failure and glucose intolerance or type II
(adult-onset) diabetes, or both. Because of a lowered sensitivity to the hormone insulin,
patients with type II diabetes or glucose-intolerance do not regulate glucose (sugar)
effectively. Rosiglitazone is used to treat type II diabetes, but it is not commonly given to
patients with heart failure because it can cause leg swelling and, rarely, pulmonary edema.
However, patients with heart failure who also have glucose intolerance or type II diabetes
generally fare worse than those with heart failure alone, and therapies that decrease insulin
resistance may be beneficial to these patients.
Patients 21 years of age and older with heart failure and type II diabetes or glucose
intolerance, or both, may be eligible for this study. Patients must be stable on current
therapy for heart failure and must not have any planned surgeries for coronary artery
disease. Candidates will be admitted to the NIH Clinical Center for from 2 to 7 days for
screening procedures, which include a medical history and physical examination, blood and
urine tests, electrocardiogram (ECG), chest x-ray, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), exercise
testing, and echocardiography (ultrasound test of the heart).
Participants will be randomly assigned to receive either rosiglitazone or placebo (an
identical-looking pill with no active ingredient). They will take one tablet a day for the
first month, one tablet twice a day for the second month, and then two tablets twice a day
from the third month to the end of the study at 6 months. During the treatment period,
patients will have a history, physical examination, and blood tests every 4 weeks, exercise
testing and echocardiography at 3 and 6 months, and urinalysis, electrocardiogram and MRI at
6 months. To check for fluid accumulation in the legs or lungs, patients will report their
weight and symptoms every 2 weeks throughout the study. After the 6-month treatment period,
patients will be put back on the diabetes medicines they were taking before the study. Their
physicians will be notified of possible modifications in treatment for maintaining optimum
glucose tolerance.
Six months after completing treatment (one year after beginning the study), patients will
return to the Clinical Center for blood tests to measure the long-term effects of
rosiglitazone and to evaluate progress. They will then be invited to return to the clinic for
annual checkups, if possible, or for yearly follow-up by mail or telephone to review their
health status.
The current medical management for heart failure invariably employs a 'one treatment fits
all' approach. The failure to appreciate specific genotypic/phenotypic features in heart
failure subjects is postulated to be a reason recent heart failure studies evaluating the
efficacy of tumor necrosis factor alpha antagonists and endothelin receptor blockers showed
no overall benefit. This experience suggests that the future improvement in the medical
management of patients with heart failure may require pre-prescription genotyping/phenotyping
to tailor drug therapy to the underlying mechanistic processes orchestrating the development
and progression of heart failure.
In this regard, the insulin-resistance syndrome has been recognized as a significant
associated factor with the development of cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure. A novel
class of agents has been developed that increase insulin sensitivity via the activation of
the transcription factor-peroxisomal proliferators activated receptor gamma (PPAR gamma).
These drugs, known as the thiazolidinediones are currently licensed for the treatment of type
II diabetes mellitus. Interestingly, at the preclinical level, PPAR gamma appears to play a
regulatory role in attenuating the development of cardiac hypertrophy and thiazolidinedione
therapy has been shown to attenuate the development of contractile dysfunction in mice
following myocardial infarction.
The hypothesis intrinsic to this proposal is that insulin resistance is commonly associated
with the development/progression of heart failure and that improving insulin sensitivity will
be of clinical benefit in this select group of patients with heart failure. The primary
objective of this study is to establish the safety and efficacy of thiazolidinedione therapy
in insulin-resistant heart failure subjects. The study is designed as a phase II, randomized,
double-blind, placebo-controlled dose escalation study. The primary outcomes will be the
safety of administration, and the evaluation of the modulation in contractile function in
heart failure subjects treated with thiazolidnediones. Moreover, changes in functional
capacity and the determination of the biochemical and genomic modification of heart failure
and insulin-resistance will be measured in response to thiazolidnedione therapy in heart
failure subjects.
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