Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background:
Objectives:
Eligibility:
Design:
Full description
Background
Patients with mutations of the insulin receptor have extreme insulin resistance. This frequently results in diabetes in childhood that is extremely difficult to manage with conventional diabetes therapies, including insulin at doses 10-50 fold higher than usual. Poorly controlled diabetes, in turn, leads to microvascular complications (e.g. blindness) and early death. Hyperthyroidism, whether endogenous (e.g. Graves' disease) or exogenous, increases energy expenditure, activates brown adipose tissue, and enhances skeletal muscle perfusion, leading to enhanced glucose disposal. In a single patient with mutation of the insulin receptor and poorly controlled diabetes despite maximal therapy, iatrogenic mild hyperthyroidism for treatment of thyroid cancer resulted in normalization of glycemic control, suggesting that thyroid hormone treatment could have therapeutic benefit in this rare disease.
Aim
The purpose of this study is to determine if treatment with thyroid hormone will increase glucose disposal in patients with mutations of the insulin receptor, and thereby improve glycemic control. The hypotheses to be tested are:
Methods
This study is a non-randomized pre-post design, conducted in two sequential parts. Part 1 is a short-term (2 week) proof-of-principle study to test whether thyroid hormone will increase glucose disposal in patients with insulin receptor mutations (with or without diabetes), and the mechanisms by which increased glucose disposal occurs. Part 2 is a longer term (6 month) therapeutic study to test whether thyroid hormone will result in improved glycemic control in diabetic patients with insulin receptor mutations.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
6 MONTHS STUDY:
Patients must meet all inclusion and exclusion criteria for the short-term study, plus have poorly controlled diabetes, defined as a hemoglobin A1c greater than or equal to 7%.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
7 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal