Title

Efficacy of Diazoxide in Type 1 Diabetes
Efficacy of 6 Months Treatment With Diazoxide at Bedtime in Preventing Beta-cell Demise in Newly Diagnosed Type 1 Diabetes
  • Phase

    Phase 4
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    diazoxide ...
  • Study Participants

    40
The purpose of this study is to find out if Diazoxide can partly retain insulin production in newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes patients.
At the time of diagnosis most subjects with type 1 diabetes retain significant endogenous insulin secretion as assessed by C-peptide measurements. Although not sufficient for the needs of the individual, residual insulin secretion is important for metabolic control, for avoidance of hypoglycemic episodes and, perhaps, for protection against diabetic complications. To retain residual endogenous insulin secretion in type 1 diabetes is thus highly desirable.

Residual insulin secretion deteriorates during the course of type 1 diabetes. The underlying autoimmune process is a major determinant of deterioration.

However, also measures that do not directly target the immune system could be beneficial. The DCCT study randomised subjects with type 1 diabetes to either intensive or conventional insulin treatment. The intensive insulin treatment markedly retarded deterioration in C-peptide levels during 5 years of observation. The favourable effect could be due to lesser hyperglycemia per se. Alternatively, the effect of intensive insulin treatment could be secondary to lesser degree of over-stimulation of the patients' beta-cells.

It is by now established that relief from over-stimulation by diazoxide favourably affects beta-cell function and that such treatment can retard a decline in residual insulin secretion in subjects with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes. Diazoxide has been used in clinical practice for > three decades without major safety concerns.

Disturbing, albeit reversible, side effects are halting long-term studies with diazoxide in type 1 diabetes. The researchers find that lower and intermittent (i.e. night time) dosing of diazoxide produces no measurable side effects in subjects with type 2 diabetes.

This is a double blinded placebo controlled study, with 35 participants with newly diagnosed type 1 diabetes are randomised into either placebo or Diazoxide for 6 months. The patients will be followed up after intervention for at least 12 months.

Beta cell function and glycemic control will be monitored.
Study Started
Feb 28
2005
Primary Completion
Aug 31
2008
Study Completion
Aug 31
2008
Last Update
Jul 18
2011
Estimate

Drug diazoxide

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Type 1 diabetes no longer than three months
Positive antibodies against GAD or IA2
Age between 18-40 years
C-peptide >0.2 nmol/l

Exclusion Criteria:

Drug or alcohol abuse
Severe concomitant disease
Pregnancy
No Results Posted