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About
Insulin is normally not bioavailable when taken through the oral route, as degradation of the molecule may occur both in the ventricle and in the intestine. Oral administration with uptake from the lesser intestine would offer major advantages if made possible. It would offer a simple non-injection method to administer insulin in connection with a meal and absorbed insulin would enter the blood stream and mimic the natural distribution in the body with a first pass through the liver. The sponsor of this study has developed a novel oral insulin formulation that is based on a proprietary dextran matrix. The investigational drug is a capsule containing 100 IU of human insulin in dextran matrix.
The primary objective of this study is to establish the safety, tolerance and PD profile (i.e. pharmacodynamic parameters for glucose and insulin) of peroral insulin in dextran matrix in patients with type 2 diabetes.
The phase I/II study protocol consists of two parts; part 1 (dose finding) and part 2 (dose verification). In study part 1 single escalating doses of oral insulin or placebo is given to the test subjects. Capillary blood glucose is used to assess the insulin effect. Subsequently, in study part 2, the investigational drug will be administered 3 times daily on 6 consecutive days. The starting dose of part 2 will be the lowest effective dose found in study part 1. Dose escalation will be done in increments of 100 IU. The total number of subjects will be 32 (for part 1 and 2 combined).
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Male and female subjects with Type 2 diabetes who were diagnosed for a minimum of 6 months, age 30-65 years.
Subjects on a stable dose of metformin for at least two months with a total daily dose of
≤ 2600 mg/day.
Subjects demonstrating an insulin resistance value (IR) lower than 3 based on the HOMA-2 model (University of Oxford, 2004) at Screening 2.
Hemoglobin A1c <9%.
Fasting capillary blood glucose within the range 6.0-9.0 mmol/L (108-162 mg/dL) at Screening 1, Screening 2 and Randomization visit. For study Part 1 only, the maximum and minimum of these three measurements may not differ by more than 2 mmol/L.
Body Mass Index (BMI) of 25-32 kg/m2
Medically stable as determined by history and physical examination, including vital signs.
Screening laboratory tests must be within normal range or judged as not clinically significant by Principal investigator/Subinvestigator.
Negative urine ketoacidosis test
ECG including QTcB shows no clinically significant abnormality or acute ischemia
Supine BP ≤ 160/100 mm Hg diastolic/systolic.
Able to adhere to the study visit schedule, and to understand and comply with other protocol requirements.
Capable of giving informed consent, which must be obtained prior to any screening procedures.
Non user of tobacco products for a minimum of 6 months prior to the first dose.
Negative urine screen for drugs of abuse and an alcohol breath test at screening and check in.
Negative laboratory screen for Hepatitis B (HBsAg and anti-HBc antibodies), Hepatitis C (anti HCV) and HIV (1&2).
Not on any prohibited medication, including alcohol.
Female subjects willing to use adequate method of contraception from the time of the first dose until one month after the last dose.
Willing to eat standard meal in accordance with the protocol.
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
32 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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