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The basic plan of the study is to randomize otherwise healthy subjects with type 2 diabetes to hydroxychloroquine, 200 mg twice daily or placebo.
Full description
Hydroxychloroquine is a medicine that has been used for a long time to treat patients with malaria, rheumatoid arthritis, lupus and other conditions. It is closely related to chloroquine but with a better side effect profile for long term use. In treating these conditions it was discovered to have some beneficial properties like lowering cholesterol and lowering sugar in the blood of those who have diabetes. The mechanisms underlying these effects are unknown. In animal studies, we have discovered that chloroquine appears to decrease glucose, lower blood pressure and decrease atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries). This collection of problems commonly occurs in the metabolic syndrome and diabetes mellitus, which affects over 20% and 7% of adults in Western countries respectively. We have recently looked at the effects of chloroquine on the metabolic syndrome in humans which showed that small doses given for a short period of time would reduce insulin resistance in patients with the metabolic syndrome. Several population studies have shown similar effects with hydroxychloroquine. Since hydroxychloroquine is similar to chloroquine, we thus expect similar effects on blood glucose, blood pressure and blood cholesterol in type 2 diabetes. This offers a unique opportunity to develop a novel approach for lowering blood pressure, lipids (cholesterol and triglycerides), and glucose in people at risk for heart disease
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Prior treatment with chloroquine or hydroxychloroquine as follows:
Morbid obesity (BMI >45)
Coronary artery disease or other vascular disease
History of stroke
Serum creatinine >-4 mg/dl for women and >-5 mg/dl for men.
Seizure disorder
History of psoriasis
Hematologic disorders, including anemia (WHO criteria for anemia:hemoglobin <13g/dL in men and <12 g/dL in women)
Current malignancy or active treatment for recurrence prevention,e.g. tamoxifen. Cancer considered to be cured, either as a result of surgery or other treatment is not exclusionary.
Asthma requiring daily beta agonist therapy or intermittent oral steroids is exclusionary. Inhaled steroids are acceptable. Obstructive sleep apnea will be allowed if continuous positive airway pressure(CPAP) or other therapy has been stable for 6 months. Other active respiratory diseases are excluded.
Treatment with 50mg or greater of Metoprolol or treatment with digoxin
Liver disease, or Liver Function Test >2 times normal
Active infection (including HIV)
Serious illness requiring ongoing medical care or medication
Treatment with atypical anti-psychotic medication. Treatment with any other medication for psychiatric illness, unless on a stable dose for 6 weeks prior to enrollment. Patients with unstable psychiatric disorders are excluded per the decision of the study MD regardless of medication history.
Taking any of the following lipid lowering medications: niacin, fibrates, and greater than 1 gm/day of fish oils
Uncontrolled hypertension (BP >150/90 mm Hg) at enrollment
Need for daily Over The Counter medications, or currently taking cimetidine or >1000 IU vitamin E daily and unwilling to reduce or discontinue vitamin E or discontinue cimetidine for the duration of the study. Patients taking more than 1000 IU vitamin E daily should reduce or discontinue the vitamin for 30 days before randomization.
Pregnant or lactating women, or women intending to become pregnant
Women not using adequate birth control (hormonal birth control is acceptable, also double barrier)
QT corrected >450 msec on screening ECG
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
21 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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