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Glucose Metabolism in Sickle Cell Disease

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University of Illinois

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus
Sickle Cell Disease

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02922296
2015-0366

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of the study is to better understand how the body handles sugars glucose and fats, such as cholesterol and triglycerides in sickle cell disease, and what puts certain persons at risk to develop diabetes. This understanding may help us to find new treatments to control blood sugar and prevent diabetes in people with and without sickle cell disease (SCD).

In this research, DNA and RNA will be isolated from blood cells. DNA will be used to find genes that cause or protect from diabetes, high cholesterol and high triglyceride, and RNA will be used for studies designed to find out how genes are doing their job of eventually producing proteins.

Full description

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is due to homozygosity for a Glu6Val mutation in HBB (sickle cell anemia; hemoglobin SS) or to compound heterozygous forms like hemoglobin SC disease and hemoglobin S-β thalassemia. Past studies suggested a low prevalence of diabetes in patients with SCD.10 Improvements in treatment and care have increased the life span of patients. This, along with the wide availability of high calorie diets and increasing adiposity in SCD raises that possibility that the prevalence of diabetes is increasing in SCD. Our study is designed to characterize the changes in metabolism that occur in sickle cell disease and to identify clinical, genetic and genomic risk factors for the development of diabetes. Our hypothesis is that non-overweight subjects with SCD have relative protection from diabetes and metabolic syndrome, but that those individuals who do become overweight have a dramatic increase in the rates of diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Lean SCD subjects will not have simply a neutral, but an overtly anti-diabetic phenotype (e.g. better glucose tolerance and lower metabolic syndrome markers). The two main study aims are as follows; Aim 1. Define the metabolic status of adult SCD subjects according to normal or increased BMI.

Aim 2. Determine genetic and genomic predictors of overweight, metabolic syndrome and diabetes in SCD subjects.

Enrollment

75 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Major sickling genotype (hemoglobin SS, Sbeta0-thalassemia, SOarab, SDpunjab)
  • Age >35 years
  • BMI <25 kg/m2 or >26 kg/m2
  • Steady state, defined as >two weeks from a hospitalization for vaso-occlusive crisis, infection or surgery and not requiring immediate parenteral medication for pain control
  • Fasting state (>8 hours since ingesting food or medication for diabetes)

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients receiving insulin therapy
  • Acute inflammatory or infectious illness or injury

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Victor Gordeuk, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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