Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02457897
Other study ID # 150119
Secondary ID 15-DK-0119
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
First received
Last updated
Start date April 17, 2015
Est. completion date September 18, 2018

Study information

Verified date September 18, 2018
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

- Insulin receptor mutation causes high blood sugars and sometimes diabetes complications. Researchers want to see if thyroid hormone helps.

Objectives:

- To see if thyroid hormone treatment changes how the body handles sugar in people with insulin receptor mutation and improves blood sugar in people with diabetes.

Eligibility:

- People ages 12 65 with an insulin receptor mutation.

Design:

- Study part 1:19-day clinic stay. Participants will be monitored for 4 days. Then for 15 days they will take a thyroid hormone pill 3 times a day. Participants will have:

- Blood tests.

- Heart rate and skin temperature monitored.

- All their food provided.

- Two 5-hour sessions in a special room. They will wear special clothes and sometimes sit still.

- Two small tubes inserted in veins. One will deliver tiny amounts of sugar and fat with a non-radioactive tracer. Participants will also drink water with a tracer. The other tube will collect blood.

- A sweet drink. Participants may have finger stick blood sugar tests.

- Glucose-monitoring device inserted into body fat for two 24-hour periods.

- Adults may have samples of fat and muscle taken.

- Heart ultrasound.

- PET-CT scan in a machine. An intravenous catheter will be placed in an arm vein. A small amount of radioactive substance will be injected.

- DEXA scan of body fat and bone density.

- Participants with poorly controlled diabetes will then take thyroid hormone at home for 6 months. They will have blood drawn and sent to the study team monthly.

- After about 3 months, they will have an overnight visit. After 6 months, they will have a 4-day visit.


Description:

Background

Patients with mutations of the insulin receptor have extreme insulin resistance. This frequently results in diabetes in childhood that is extremely difficult to manage with conventional diabetes therapies, including insulin at doses 10-50 fold higher than usual. Poorly controlled diabetes, in turn, leads to microvascular complications (e.g. blindness) and early death. Hyperthyroidism, whether endogenous (e.g. Graves' disease) or exogenous, increases energy expenditure, activates brown adipose tissue, and enhances skeletal muscle perfusion, leading to enhanced glucose disposal. In a single patient with mutation of the insulin receptor and poorly controlled diabetes despite maximal therapy, iatrogenic mild hyperthyroidism for treatment of thyroid cancer resulted in normalization of glycemic control, suggesting that thyroid hormone treatment could have therapeutic benefit in this rare disease.

Aim

The purpose of this study is to determine if treatment with thyroid hormone will increase glucose disposal in patients with mutations of the insulin receptor, and thereby improve glycemic control. The hypotheses to be tested are:

1. Thyroid hormone will increase whole-body glucose disposal in patients with insulin receptor mutations.

2. This increased glucose disposal will be mediated via increased glucose uptake in brow adipose tissue (BAT) and muscle.

3. Increases in glucose disposal will result in improved glycemic control.

Methods

This study is a non-randomized pre-post design, conducted in two sequential parts. Part 1 is a short-term (2 week) proof-of-principle study to test whether thyroid hormone will increase glucose disposal in patients with insulin receptor mutations (with or without diabetes), and the mechanisms by which increased glucose disposal occurs. Part 2 is a longer term (6 month) therapeutic study to test whether thyroid hormone will result in improved glycemic control in diabetic patients with insulin receptor mutations.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 7
Est. completion date September 18, 2018
Est. primary completion date September 18, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 12 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility - 2 WEEKS STUDY:

INCLUSION CRITERIA:

1. Mutation of the insulin receptor (either recessive or dominant negative). If mutation status is not known prior to enrollment, subjects will undergo genotyping at enrollment. In the unanticipated event that a patient does not have a mutation of the insulin receptor, he or she will not complete the study and his or her data will not be included in the analysis.

EXCLUSION CRITERIA:

1. Changes in doses of diabetes medications (including metformin, insulin, sulfonylureas, thiazolidinediones, leptin, GLP-1 agonists, DPP4 inhibitors, etc.) in the preceding 10 weeks.

2. Any medical condition or medication that will increase risk to the subject (e.g. ischemic or structural heart disease, congestive heart failure, uncontrolled hypertension, or arrhythmia) or that will interfere with interpretation of study data.

3. Disorders that would lead to erratic gastrointestinal absorption or loss of thyroid hormone from the gut (severe diarrhea, celiac disease, use of bile acid sequestrants, excessive consumption of soybean products).

4. Any form of endogenous hyperthyroidism or hypothyroidism at baseline.

5. Current or recent (past 8 weeks) use of thyroid hormone or anti-thyroid drugs.

6. Extreme disorders of thyroid hormone binding to thyroid binding globulin (excess or deficiency) or protein loss (nephrotic range proteinuria) that would lead to difficulties achieving a consistent thyroid hormone level for study.

7. Known presence of a rare clinical disorder that leads to thyroid hormone insensitivity (known T3 receptor mutations, selenocysteine insertion sequence-binding protein 2 (SBP2) abnormalities, monocarboxylate transporter defects).

8. Current use of beta blockers

9. Pregnancy or breast feeding

10. Any EKG abnormality that could increase risk of T3 treatment (resting sinus tachycardia (age adjusted norms), atrial fibrillation, myocardial ischemia, left or right ventricular excitation block, left ventricular hypertrophy or extrasystoles)

11. Known allergy or hypersensitivity to any form of thyroid hormone

12. Known adrenal insufficiency

13. Dependence on oral anticoagulant medications (adults only)

14. Use of tricyclic anti-depressants, as transient cardiac arrhythmias have been observed with the concomitant use of thyroid hormone.

15. Use of cholestyramine.

16. History of clinically significant osteoporosis per investigator judgment (e.g. previous fragility fracture)

6 MONTHS STUDY:

Patients must meet all inclusion and exclusion criteria for the short-term study, plus have poorly controlled diabetes, defined as a hemoglobin A1c greater than or equal to 7%.

Study Design


Intervention

Drug:
Liothyronine
Oral supplement given every 8 hours

Locations

Country Name City State
United States National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike Bethesda Maryland

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (3)

Kahn CR, Flier JS, Bar RS, Archer JA, Gorden P, Martin MM, Roth J. The syndromes of insulin resistance and acanthosis nigricans. Insulin-receptor disorders in man. N Engl J Med. 1976 Apr 1;294(14):739-45. — View Citation

Musso C, Cochran E, Moran SA, Skarulis MC, Oral EA, Taylor S, Gorden P. Clinical course of genetic diseases of the insulin receptor (type A and Rabson-Mendenhall syndromes): a 30-year prospective. Medicine (Baltimore). 2004 Jul;83(4):209-22. Review. — View Citation

Skarulis MC, Celi FS, Mueller E, Zemskova M, Malek R, Hugendubler L, Cochran C, Solomon J, Chen C, Gorden P. Thyroid hormone induced brown adipose tissue and amelioration of diabetes in a patient with extreme insulin resistance. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010 Jan;95(1):256-62. doi: 10.1210/jc.2009-0543. Epub 2009 Nov 6. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Total Body Glucose Disposal in the Fasting State 2 weeks
Primary Hemoglobin A1C 6 months
Secondary Muscle Glucose Uptake 2 weeks
Secondary Muscle Glucose Uptake 6 months
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03743779 - Mastering Diabetes Pilot Study
Completed NCT03786978 - Pharmaceutical Care in the Reduction of Readmission Rates in Diabetes Melitus N/A
Completed NCT01804803 - DIgital Assisted MONitoring for DiabeteS - I N/A
Completed NCT05039970 - A Real-World Study of a Mobile Device-based Serious Health Game on Session Attendance in the National Diabetes Prevention Program N/A
Completed NCT04507867 - Effect of a NSS to Reduce Complications in Patients With Covid-19 and Comorbidities in Stage III N/A
Completed NCT04068272 - Safety of Bosentan in Type II Diabetic Patients Phase 1
Completed NCT03243383 - Readmission Prevention Pilot Trial in Diabetes Patients N/A
Completed NCT03730480 - User Performance of the CONTOUR NEXT and CONTOUR TV3 Blood Glucose Monitoring System (BGMS) N/A
Recruiting NCT02690467 - Efficacy, Safety and Acceptability of the New Pen Needle 34gx3,5mm. N/A
Completed NCT02229383 - Phase III Study to Evaluate Safety and Efficacy of Added Exenatide Versus Placebo to Titrated Basal Insulin Glargine in Inadequately Controlled Patients With Type II Diabetes Mellitus Phase 3
Completed NCT05799976 - Text Message-Based Nudges Prior to Primary Care Visits to Increase Care Gap Closure N/A
Completed NCT06181721 - Evaluating Glucose Control Using a Next Generation Automated Insulin Delivery Algorithm in Patients With Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes N/A
Recruiting NCT04489043 - Exercise, Prediabetes and Diabetes After Renal Transplantation. N/A
Withdrawn NCT03319784 - Analysis for NSAID VS Corticosteroid Shoulder Injection in Diabetic Patients Phase 4
Completed NCT03542084 - Endocrinology Auto-Triggered e-Consults N/A
Completed NCT02229396 - Phase 3 28-Week Study With 24-Week and 52-week Extension Phases to Evaluate Efficacy and Safety of Exenatide Once Weekly and Dapagliflozin Versus Exenatide and Dapagliflozin Matching Placebo Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05544266 - Rare and Atypical Diabetes Network
Completed NCT01892319 - An International Non-interventional Cohort Study to Evaluate the Safety of Treatment With Insulin Detemir in Pregnant Women With Diabetes Mellitus. Diabetes Pregnancy Registry
Completed NCT05031000 - Blood Glucose Monitoring Systems: Discounter Versus Brand N/A
Recruiting NCT04039763 - RT-CGM in Young Adults at Risk of DKA N/A