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Advanced Glycation Endproducts and Bone Material Strength in T2D Treated With Pyridoxamine

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Columbia University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Treatments

Drug: placebo
Dietary Supplement: Pyridoxamine Dihydrochloride

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03778580
AAAR5451

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to determine if a specific form of Vitamin B known as Pyridoxamine helps improve bone strength over one year in women (>65 yrs old) with Type 2 Diabetes. The investigators know that people with type 2 diabetes have the lower bone material strength and the investigators suspect this is due to high levels of circulating sugars that build up over time (known as Advanced Glycation Endproducts). The investigators will study whether using a specific form of vitamin B, known as pyridoxamine helps improve bone strength and reduce levels of circulating sugars over a one year time period.

Full description

Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) has become one of the most important diseases of our time. Recent research shows that diabetes has negative effects on bones and that people with diabetes might more likely to break a bone. The investigators don't know the reasons for this, but the investigators suspect that normal bone replacement is slowed down in diabetes and this could slow down the growth of new bone. It is possible that the normal material becomes weaker because sugar-related components ("Advanced Glycation Endproducts") are making the bone more brittle. The investigators have shown in past research that people who have type 2 diabetes are more likely to have both weaker bone with lower "bone material strength" and also higher level of sugar-related components("Advanced Glycation Endproducts"). This study will focus on attempting to lower the sugar-related components("Advanced Glycation Endproducts") by treating a group of patients with type 2 diabetes with an over- the- counter B vitamin, known as vitamin B6 or pyridoxamine for one year. The investigators will compare post-menopausal women both before and after pyridoxamine use and study them in terms of different bone features based on blood tests, bone imaging, a bone indentation test and a measurement of sugar-related components in the skin. This study will help to clarify if using pyridoxamine helps improve bone strength in women with diabetes.

Enrollment

55 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Postmenopausal women ≥65 years
  • Diagnosis of T2D for ≥ 5 years, with all HbA1c levels.

Exclusion criteria

  • Hormone replacement treatment (HTR) use (to avoid the influence of estrogen).
  • Fractures (excluding skull, facial bones, metacarpals, fingers, toes, and fractures associated with severe trauma) within 12 months.
  • A history of pathological fractures (eg, due to Paget's disease, myeloma, metastatic malignancy).
  • Type 1 diabetes
  • Disorders associated with altered skeletal structure or function (chronic liver disease' chronic renal disease stage 4 [eGFR < 30 mL/mim/1.73 m2] or worse, malignancy, hypoparathyroidism or hyperparathyroidism,acromegaly, Cushing's syndrome, hypopituitarism, alcohol intake > 3U/day).
  • Treatment with any of the following drugs in part year:current corticosteroid, anticonvulsant therapy(phenytoin, phenobarbital, primidone, carbamazepine), SGLT2 inhibitor if on it for < 1 year), pharmacological doses of thyroid hormone (TSH<normal), adrenal or anabolic steroids, Aromatase inhibitors, calcitonin, bisphosphonates, denosumab, estrogen, or selective estrogen receptor modulator, sodium fluoride, teriparatide, thiazolidinediones(TZDs).
  • Serum 25(OH)D levels < 20 ng/ml. If 25(OH)D levels are < 20 ng/ml, rescreening will be allowed following a vitamin D loading regimen of 50,000 IU/week for 4 weeks. If serum 25(OH) D levels are ≥ 20 ng/ml after supplementation, the subject will be allowed to enroll.
  • Current use of pyridoxamine (although not multivitamin or vitamin B6 users because pyridoxamine is not at pharmacologic levels in these supplements).
  • Allergy to pyridoxamine and vitamin B6.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

55 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

pyridoxamine
Experimental group
Description:
pyridoxamine dihydrochloride (over- the- counter type of vitamin B6) 200 mg po bid for one year
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Pyridoxamine Dihydrochloride
identical placebo
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
identical placebo po bid for one year
Treatment:
Drug: placebo

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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