Title

Effect of Levosulpiride on Retinal Alterations in Patients With Diabetic Retinopathy and Diabetic Macular Edema
Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of Levosulpiride to Improve Retinal Alterations in Patients With Diabetic Retinopathy and Diabetic Macular Edema.
  • Phase

    Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Recruiting
  • Intervention/Treatment

    levosulpiride lactose ...
  • Study Participants

    120
This is a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to evaluate the safety and efficacy of levosulpiride to improve retinal alterations due to diabetic macular edema and diabetic retinopathy
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) and diabetic macular edema (DME) are the primary cause of irreversible blindness and visual impairment in working-age adults. Nearly 80% of patients with diabetes will experience some degree of DR and DME 15-20 years after diagnosis. Altered blood parameters (glucose, lipids, and pressure) influence disease development and progression; however, the combined values of these parameters account for only 10% of the risk of DR. Laser therapy is effective for preserving sight but is poor for reversing visual loss. Anti-angiogenic therapies are effective and less destructive but require frequent intravitreal delivery, which raises the risk of infection and ocular complications. Therefore, the prevention and treatment of DR and DME should include other modifiable factors. Data from preclinical studies support a protective role for the serum levels of the hormone prolactin. The trial investigates a new specific therapy for DR and DME based on elevating the circulating levels of prolactin with the prokynetic, dopamine D2 receptor blocker, levosulpiride. It is a prospective, randomized clinical study in patients with DR and DME in which ophthalmologic and health parameters evaluated before and after starting the study medication will determine the efficacy and safety of treatment.

Patient registries: Patients are enrolled at the time of a routine health care service. The caregiver and patient together, in a standardized uniform manner for every patient, will collect the data. Data collection procedures are clearly described and include protocols, policies, and the formatted listing of all the data elements, their full definitions and validation rules. All personnel involved in data collection are qualified registry trained. The same physicians, laboratory technicians, and graduate students will evaluate and collect the data from all patients. An individual fully knowledgeable of all protocols, policies, procedures, and definitions in the registry will be designated as Accountable for Data Quality. This individual (coordinator) should ensure that all collected data are complete, accurate, and valid. Data logically inconsistent will be confronted to information in external database. Data collected on formatted paper forms are entered into a computer and electronic registries carefully reviewed by a third party to identify missing data, invalid or erroneous entries, and inconsistent data. Any data review activity and remediation efforts will be documented. Amelioration of data problems may include querying the personnel uploading the data, the coordinator, the interviewer, or the patient. The proposed sample size and study duration are the minimum required and are based on biological models of DR and on clinical experience evaluating primary data associated with the study. These parameters may have to be modified to accommodate the sample size required to obtain clinically important differences and their statistical evaluation, access to eligible patients, lack of adherence to therapy at specific calendar dates (holidays), etc. Statistical methods include those evaluating continuous and categorical variables, incidence and prevalence, the association between a risk factor and outcome, and the relative contribution of confounding factors.
Study Started
May 24
2017
Primary Completion
Jun 30
2025
Anticipated
Study Completion
Jun 30
2025
Anticipated
Last Update
Aug 25
2023

Drug DME lactose pill

Patients with DME will take placebo orally 3 times a day (TID) for 8 weeks.The placebo is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: placebo, sugar

Drug DME levosulpiride

Patients with DME will take levosulpiride (75 mg/day) orally TID for 8 weeks. Levosulpiride is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: dopamine D2 receptor blocker

Drug DR lactose pill

Patients with non-proliferative DR will take a lactose pill (placebo) orally TID for 8 weeks. The placebo is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: placebo, sugar

Drug DR levosulpiride

Patients with non-proliferative DR will take levosulpiride (75 mg/day) orally TIDfor 8 weeks. Levosulpiride is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: dopamine D2 receptor blocker

Drug DR vitrectomy lactose pill

Patients with proliferative DR (undergoing medically prescribed vitrectomy 7 days after starting the study medication) will have to take a lactose pill (placebo) orally TID for one week. The last placebo pill will be taken on the morning of the day vitrectomy is performed. The placebo is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: placebo, sugar

Drug DR vitrectomy levosulpiride

Patients with proliferative DR (undergoing medically prescribed vitrectomy 7 days after starting the study medication) will take levosulpiride (75 mg/day) orally TID for one week. The last pill will be taken on the morning of the day vitrectomy is performed. Levosulpiride is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: dopamine D2 receptor blocker

Drug DME plus ranibizumab lactose pill

Patients with DME with conventional intravitreal antiangiogenic therapy with ranibizumab (0.5 mg every 4 weeks for 12 weeks) will take a lactose pill (placebo) orally TID for 24 weeks. The placebo is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: placebo, sugar

Drug DME plus ranibizumab levosulpiride

Patients with DME with receive intravitreal antiangiogenic therapy with ranibizumab (0.5 mg every 4 weeks for 12 weeks) will take a levosulpiride (75 mg/day) orally TID for 24 weeks. The study medication is taken on top of standard therapy for diabetes and blood pressure control.

  • Other names: dopamine D2 receptor blocker

DME lactose pill Placebo Comparator

Patients with DME will be randomized to take a lactose pill (placebo).

DME levosulpiride Experimental

Patients with DME will be randomized to take levosulpiride.

DR lactose pill Placebo Comparator

Patients with non-proliferative DR will be randomized to take a lactose pill (placebo)

DR levosulpiride Experimental

Patients with non-proliferative DR will be randomized to take levosulpiride

DR, vitrectomy lactose pill Placebo Comparator

Patients with proliferative DR (undergoing medically prescribed vitrectomy 7 days after starting the study) will be randomized to take a lactose pill (placebo).

DR, vitrectomy levosulpiride Experimental

Patients with proliferative DR (undergoing medically prescribed vitrectomy 7 days after starting the study) will be randomized to take levosulpiride.

DME plus ranibizumab lactose pill Placebo Comparator

Patients with DME that will receive intravitreal antiangiogenic therapy with ranibizumab will be randomized to take a lactose pill (placebo)

DME plus ranibizumab levosulpiride Experimental

Patients with DME that will receive intravitreal antiangiogenic therapy with ranibizumab will be randomized to take levosulpiride

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Age equal or greater than 40 years but no older than 69 years
Male and female subjects with mild and moderate diabetic macular edema (DME), non-proliferative diabetic retinopathy (DR), and with proliferative DR undergoing medically prescribed vitrectomy.
Signing informed consent
Without ocular complications: severe myopia (> 6 diopters), ocular media opacity, retinal detachment, etc.
Without previous ocular treatments: ocular surgeries, retinal laser photocoagulation, intravitreal administration of antiangiogenic agents (delivered < 6 months before enrollment).
Prolactin serum levels ≤ 20 ng/ml
With normal or mild loss of kidney function (glomerular filtration rate >60 ml/min) for groups with DME and DR without vitrectomy.
With mild to severe loss of kidney function (glomerular filtration rate >30 ml/min) for groups with DR undergoing vitrectomy.
Without contraindications for the use of levosulpiride (Parkinson disease, epilepsy, breast cancer, alcoholism, hypokalemia).
Without hyperprolactinemia inducing conditions: Pathologies (hypothyrodism, hepatic dysfunction, prolactinomas); Medication (antipsychotics, antidepressants, prokinetics, other)

Exclusion Criteria:

Not meeting inclusion criteria.
Adverse and intolerable drug effects.
Not complying with study medication
Inability to continue in-hospital appointments.
Missing outcome data
Hesitation to continue with study medication
Relocation to another state or country
Voluntary withdrawal of consent
No Results Posted