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Effect of Glucocorticoid on Exogenous Insulin Antibody Syndrome

Early Phase 1
Conditions
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2
Interventions
Registration Number
NCT04357392
Lead Sponsor
chenfengling
Brief Summary

Diabetic patients who have long-term insulin used can product antibody against exogenous insulin, the investigators named this condition Exogenous insulin antibody syndrome (EIAs). Exogenous insulin antibody can cause blood glucose fluctuation, high blood glucose and refractory hypoglycemia, and have a serious impact on the health of diabetic patients. After adding glucocorticoid, some EIAs patients can reduce insulin dosage, correct hypoglycemia, even eliminate insulin antibody in about half a year, and achieve the goal of blood glucose stability. But up to now, there is no study to evaluate the improvement of blood glucose by glucocorticoid intervention in EIAS patients receiving insulin therapy. This project plans to collect 20 cases of EIAS and carry out a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the improvement of blood glucose by glucocorticoid intervention.

Detailed Description

Diabetic patients who have long-term insulin used can product antibody against exogenous insulin, the investigators named this condition Exogenous insulin antibody syndrome (EIAs).Exogenous insulin antibody can lead to serious clinical consequences , such as blood glucose fluctuations, high blood glucose and refractory hypoglycemia, which is not only affect patients' blood glucose control, but also have a serious impact on the health of diabetic patients. Change to the oral antidiabetic drugs, change the insulin type or add glucocorticoids to the patients with serious disease are the main treatments. However, most of these treatment schemes are case reports, and there is no randomized controlled cohort study on the treatment scheme. The biosynthetic human insulin sequence is exactly the same as that of human insulin. Why do some diabetics have insulin antibody? The investigators speculated that insulin antibody production in some patients with EIAs is related to autoimmune disorder. After adding glucocorticoid, some EIAs patients can reduce insulin dosage, correct hypoglycemia, even eliminate insulin antibody in about half a year, and achieve the goal of blood glucose stability. However, there is no study to evaluate the effect of glucocorticoid intervention on the improvement of blood glucose in the EIAs population. This project plans to collect 20 cases of EIAs and carry out a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to evaluate the improvement of blood glucose by glucocorticoid intervention, so as to provide scientific basis for the standardized diagnosis and treatment of EIAs.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
20
Inclusion Criteria
  1. The diagnosis of type 2 diabetes was in accordance with the WHO diagnostic criteria of diabetes in 1999:fasting blood glucose ≥ 7.0mmol/l and / or blood glucose ≥ 11.1mmol/l in 2 hours after OGTT
  2. Aged between 30-60 years
  3. Positive detection of insulin antibody, hyperinsulinemia (refer to WHO standard in 1999, fasting insulin > 15 μ IU / ml or 2h postprandial insulin > 80 μ IU / ml)
  4. Type 2 diabetes mellitus patients who receiving insulin therapy
  5. Those meeting all the above standards can be included
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Patients who had used animal insulin before the study
  2. Type 1 diabetes, gestational diabetes and special type diabetes
  3. Diabetic acute complications (ketoacidosis, hyperosmotic nonketotic coma, lactic acidosis) or serious chronic complications ; serious chronic complications (proliferative retinopathy, foot ulcer or gangrene, Complications of heart, brain and kidney)
  4. Patients with other serious heart disease, endocrine disease, autoimmune or chronic wasting disease
  5. Patients with severe primary diseases such as liver, kidney and hematopoietic system , Patients with psychosis
  6. Patients who are using or need to use thiol containing drugs in the near future
  7. Patients with severe insulin allergy
  8. Glucocorticoid contraindications (severe psychosis and epilepsy, active peptic ulcer or tuberculosis, recent gastrointestinal anastomosis, fracture, wound repair period, corneal ulcer, adrenocortical hyperfunction, severe hypertension, pregnant women, infection beyond the control of antibiotics, such as varicella, mould infection, etc.)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Glucocorticoid intervention groupPrednisoneprednisone
Placebo control groupPrednisoneplacebo
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of patients with HbA1c <7% at 12 and 24 weeks24 weeks
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Blood glucose fluctuation at 4, 12 and 24 weeks24 weeks
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