Type 1 Diabetes Clinical Trial
Official title:
Use of Diazoxide in Acute Hypoglycaemia
Verified date | October 2019 |
Source | University of Dundee |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The investigators know that intensive insulin therapy and tight glucose control is associated
with reduction of diabetic complications. However, many patients on insulin don't achieve
this because of the risk and the fear of hypoglycaemia (too low blood glucose).
There has been a lot of work done recently looking at the mechanisms by which the brain
detects hypoglycaemia. A key player is a potassium channel in the brain (KATP channel).
Studies have shown that when these channels are opened, there is a release of hormones such
as adrenaline that can help in raising blood sugars to counteract and increase awareness of
hypoglycaemia. The investigators study aims to look at an old drug called diazoxide, which is
able to open KATP channels.
The investigators aim to see if diazoxide will amplify the release of hormones such as
adrenaline when the blood sugar is low. If this is the case, this will aid quicker recovery
following hypoglycaemia.
The investigators aim to do this by performing a well established experimental protocol that
has been performed safely over the last 20 years called a clamp study. The clamp study will
involve slowly bringing the blood sugars down using insulin and intravenous glucose in a
controlled fashion. The main outcome will be the hormonal responses (adrenaline response) at
a blood sugar level of 2.5mmol/L. Symptoms of hypoglycaemia will be monitored, as well as
working memory tests using standardised questionnaires.
The design of the investigators study will be a randomised trial comparing the effects of
diazoxide with placebo in which all patients will receive both diazoxide and placebo in
random order (crossover design).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 12 |
Est. completion date | March 2013 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2013 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 55 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Healthy adults (aged 18-55) with >5 years disease duration - On intensive insulin therapy (CSII or multiple daily injections) - HbA1C<8.0% - Ability to give written informed consent to participate in the study - BMI between 20-29 Exclusion Criteria: - History of significant cardiac, hepatic, renal or neurological disease. - Significant head injury, epilepsy or hypoglycaemia-induced seizures. - Pregnancy. - Breast feeding mothers. - Participants on thiazide diuretics - Participants on other potassium channel openers (nicorandil, minoxidil) - Participants on medications with vasodilatory properties such as methyldopa, reserpine, theophyllines and nitrites. - Participants on hydantoins (fosphenytoin, phenytoin) - Significant anaemia Hb<11.0 and Hct<33%. - If they have donated blood in the last 30 days. - All those who have participated in a CTIMP in the last 3 months - Participants who are already on diazoxide or who have a past history of allergy to diazoxide |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | NHS Tayside | Dundee |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Dundee | Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation |
United Kingdom,
George PS, Tavendale R, Palmer CN, McCrimmon RJ. Diazoxide improves hormonal counterregulatory responses to acute hypoglycemia in long-standing type 1 diabetes. Diabetes. 2015 Jun;64(6):2234-41. doi: 10.2337/db14-1539. Epub 2015 Jan 15. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Symptom scores and Cognitive function scores at 2.5mmol/L | Symptom scores will be assessed using the Edinburgh Hypoglycaemia Symptom score assesment, and Cognition will be assessed using Trail Making B, Digit substituition, Digit forward and backward and 4 choice reaction tests. | Done during the hyperinsulinaemic hypoglycaemic clamp | |
Primary | Adrenaline response(pmol/L) at 2.5mmol/L of glucose | The body secretes hormones such as adrenaline as a response to low blood sugars. Patients who have had insulin-dependant diabetes for over 5 years rely heavily on adrenaline release, to produce symptoms, so that they can respond appropriately to low blood sugars. However, this response is blunted in those with type 1 diabetes. Our question is whether the magnitude of this response can be increased by use of diazoxide in the context of hypoglycaemia, so that patients with insulin-dependant diabetes become better aware of hypoglycaemia. |
1 year | |
Secondary | Glucose Thresholds (calculated when counter-regulatory hormone release is greater than 2SD of hormone level at euglycaemia 4.0mmol/L blood sugar) of each of the counter-regulatory hormones (adrenaline, noradrenalin, glucagon) | Our study design enables us to bring down the blood sugar in a controlled fashion and maintain it at certain levels. We will be measuring hormones including adrenaline and testing cognitive function as well as assessing symptoms at each of these blood sugar levels. We want to see if diazoxide affects the threshold at which patients are able to mount a clinically relevant rise in counter-regulatory hormones and symptoms of hypoglycaemia. | 1 year |
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