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About
The goal of this clinical trial is to understand how the blood sugar-lowering hormone insulin works in healthy adults versus those who are at risk for type 2 diabetes. The study will use a drug called alpelisib, which interferes with insulin's actions in the body, to answer the study's main question: does the liver continue to respond to insulin's stimulation of fat production even when it loses the ability to stop making glucose (sugar) in response to insulin. Researchers will compare the impact of single doses of both alpelisib and placebo (inert non-drug) in random order (like flipping a coin) in study participants. Participants will be asked to stay twice overnight in the hospital, take single doses of alpelisib and placebo (one or the other on each of the two hospital stays), and receive intravenous (into the vein) infusions of non-radioactive "tracer" molecules that allow researchers to measure the production of glucose (sugar) and fats by the liver. Measurements will be done both overnight, while participants are asleep and fasting (not eating or drinking other than water) and while consuming a standardized diet of nutritional beverages during the following day.
The objective is to evaluate the effect of lowering insulin levels, while maintaining constant mild hyperglycemia, on plasma glucose and lipid levels.
Full description
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is an under-appreciated complication of lipid dysmetabolism in type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Although it appears that insulin resistance (IR) is a mechanism common to both, the mechanisms linking IR to unhealthy fat accumulation in liver remains unclear. "Pure" IR would be expected to disinhibit hepatic glucose production while dampening hepatic triglyceride (TG) biosynthesis, but the excessive hepatic de novo lipogenesis (DNL) of IR-associated MASLD suggests that hepatic IR is "selective." However, the concept of IR selectivity is controversial, and because of clinical heterogeneity, lead-time discrepancies, co-morbidities, and medication effects, parsing out this pathophysiologic conundrum in humans is challenging. The investigators plan to test whether the multifactorial IR in patients at risk of T2DM/MASLD is selective by determining if inducing a discrete, "pure" form of IR, via pharmacologic inhibition of phosphoinositide-3-kinase (PI3K) with alpelisib, versus placebo, attenuates excessive DNL. Investigators will also study this question in healthy, insulin-sensitive (IS) volunteers.
Participants in this randomized crossover trial will be admitted twice to the inpatient clinical research unit. During each admission, they will take a dose of either alpelisib or placebo (in randomized order) in the evening and receive infusions of [13C] sodium acetate and [2H] D-glucose to measure DNL and endogenous glucose production (EGP), respectively, during an overnight fast. DNL measurement will then continue during the following day during 8 hours of standardized mixed-meal feedings. Blood will be drawn at defined intervals for determining levels of glucose, insulin, lipids including triglycerides and free fatty acids, and tracer/tracee enrichments for the stable-isotope tracers. There will be a 2-8-week hiatus for drug washout between the two inpatient study admissions.
Enrollment
Sex
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Adults aged 18-70 years, using highly effective contraception if of childbearing potential
Able to understand written and spoken English and/or Spanish
Body mass index of:
Evidence of insulin sensitivity or insulin resistance:
Exclusion criteria
Inability to provide informed consent in English or Spanish
Concerns arising at screening visit:
Reproductive concerns i. Positive qualitative β-hCG (i.e., pregnancy test) in women of childbearing potential ii. Women currently pregnant iii. Women currently breastfeeding
Concerns related to glucose metabolism
Concerns related to lipid metabolism
Known, documented history, at the time of screening, of any of the following medical conditions:
Clinical concern for increased risk of volume overload, including due to medications and/or heart/liver/kidney problems, as listed above
Use of oral or parenteral corticosteroids (at greater than prednisone 5 mg daily, or equivalent) for more than 3 days within the previous 30 days; topical and inhaled formulations are permitted
History of certain weight-loss (bariatric) surgery, including:
Clinical concern for alcohol overuse based on chart review and/or by recruit's report of more than 14 standard drinks per week for males or more than 7 standard drinks per week for females
Clinical concern for use of illicit drugs other than marijuana or lawfully prescribed medications based on recruit's report, chart review, and point-of-care urine drug test at screening
History of or ongoing febrile illness within 30 days of screening
Any other disease or condition or laboratory value that, in the opinion of the investigator, would place the participant at an unacceptable risk and/or interfere with the analysis of study data.
Known allergy/hypersensitivity to any component of the medicinal product formulations (including soy, cow dairy, or gluten), other biologics, venipuncture materials, plastics, adhesive or silicone, or ongoing clinically important allergy/hypersensitivity as judged by the investigator.
Dietary restrictions (e.g.., vegan, kosher, halal) on gelatin present in overencapsulation
Concurrent enrollment in another clinical study of any investigational drug/biologic therapy within 6 months prior to screening or within 5 half-lives of an investigational agent or biologic, whichever is longer.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
32 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Joshua R Cook, MD, PhD; Zachary D Sone
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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