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A Multicenter Clinical Trial of Allopurinol to Prevent Kidney Function Loss in Type 1 Diabetes

The safety and scientific validity of this study is the responsibility of the study sponsor and investigators. Listing a study does not mean it has been evaluated by the U.S. Federal Government. Read our disclaimer for details.
 
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02017171
Recruitment Status : Completed
First Posted : December 20, 2013
Results First Posted : November 20, 2020
Last Update Posted : December 4, 2020
Sponsor:
Collaborators:
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
Joslin Diabetes Center
University of Minnesota
University of Colorado, Denver
University of Michigan
University of Toronto
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen
Washington University School of Medicine
University of Washington
Emory University
University of Calgary
University of Alberta
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
BCDiabetes.Ca
Information provided by (Responsible Party):
Alessandro Doria, Joslin Diabetes Center

Brief Summary:
Despite improvements during the past 20 years in blood glucose and blood pressure control, diabetic kidney disease remains one of the most important causes of health problems in patients with diabetes. Novel treatments to complement blood glucose and blood pressure control are urgently needed. The goal of this study is to see whether a medication called allopurinol may help prevent loss of kidney function among people with type 1 diabetes. Allopurinol has been used for many years to decrease high blood uric acid and treat gout - a disease characterized by arthritis, especially of the foot joints. There is evidence suggesting that allopurinol might also be useful in people with diabetes who have normal or moderately impaired kidney function to decrease the risk of developing advanced kidney disease in the future. To prove this beneficial effect of allopurinol, we will be conducting an international clinical trial at eight diabetes centers, enrolling approximately 480 patients with type 1 diabetes who are at increased risk of developing kidney disease. Participants will be randomly assigned to take allopurinol or placebo (inactive pill) for three years, during which they will be followed through periodical visits. To prevent any possible bias, neither the participants nor the clinical staff knows who is taking allopurinol and who is taking the placebo. Kidney function will be measured at the beginning and at the end of the treatment period to see whether patients taking allopurinol experience a slower loss of kidney function over time as compared to those taking the inactive pill. If this trial is successful, the reduction in health problems resulting from the prevention or delay of kidney function loss due to the use of allopurinol would have a major impact on the lives of type 1 diabetic patients as well as on society at large, significantly reducing the human and financial costs associated with diabetic kidney disease. Because of the emphasis on early intervention, the proposed trial, if successful, will establish a new paradigm in treatments to slow or prevent progression towards end stage kidney disease in type 1 diabetes far beyond anything achieved to date.

Condition or disease Intervention/treatment Phase
Diabetic Nephropathies Coronary Artery Disease Drug: Allopurinol Drug: Placebo Phase 3

Detailed Description:

Despite improvements in the past 20 years in glycemic and blood pressure control and the introduction of 'renoprotective' drugs such as renin-angiotensin system blockers, the incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) in type 1 diabetes (T1D) is not declining. Novel therapies to complement these interventions are urgently needed. Mounting evidence from prospective studies indicates that moderately elevated serum uric acid is a strong, independent predictor of an increased risk of chronic kidney disease and increased rates of loss of kidney function among T1D persons. To study whether uric acid lowering can reduce glomerular filtration rate (GFR) loss in T1D, we have established the PERL (Preventing Early Renal Function Loss in Diabetes) Consortium including investigators from Joslin Diabetes Center, the Universities of Minnesota, Colorado, Toronto, and Michigan, Northwestern University, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, and the Steno Diabetes Center in Denmark. With the support of NIH grant R03 DK094484, the Consortium has designed a three-year, multi-center, double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial with the specific aim of evaluating the efficacy of the urate-lowering drug allopurinol, as compared to placebo, in reducing kidney function loss among subjects with T1D. The trial is targeted to T1D patients with microalbuminuria or moderate macroalbuminuria or ongoing kidney function decline and serum uric acid levels ≥ 4.5 mg/dl, since these are the patients who are at very high risk of having rapid GFR decline and might benefit most from reductions in uric acid levels. Study subjects will be required to have a GFR between 40 and 99 ml/min/1.73 m2, consistent with the goal of intervening relatively early in the course of clinical DN rather than at later stages when structural changes are far advanced and a very large proportion of kidney function has already been lost. The primary endpoint of the study will be the GFR (as measured by iohexol plasma disappearance) at the end of a 2-month wash-out period after the 3-year intervention. Sample size calculations under various dropout and non-adherence scenarios suggest that 240 subjects in each treatment arm would provide at least 80% power to detect a clinically meaningful and achievable reduction in GFR decline in the allopurinol vs. the placebo group.If we demonstrate that allopurinol can halt or slow down GFR decline in T1D subjects, we will provide a safe and inexpensive intervention to prevent or delay kidney failure in T1D that can be applied at the earliest clinically detectable stages of renal injury. It is difficult to overstate how significant this finding would be, both from the perspective of public health and that of persons with diabetes.

Thirty-one of the 530 participants in this study were recruited as part of a pilot study (JDRF 17-2012-377, NCT01575379) and transferred to the main study (NCT02017171) when this was funded. Eligibility criteria for the pilot study were the same as those for the main study, with the exception of a wider estimated GFR interval at entry in the run-in period (eGFR=35-109) ml/min/1.73 m2) and the additional requirement of a measured GFR (iGFR) between 45 and 99 ml/min/1.73 m2 at the end of the run-in period. Pilot subjects joined the main study at a time point corresponding to the time elapsed from randomization in the pilot. Thus, they were exposed to the study medication for the same length of time (3 years) as participants who were directly enrolled in the main study. Outcomes measures were those of the main study, regardless of whether participants were transferred from the pilot or were directly enrolled in the main study.

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Study Type : Interventional  (Clinical Trial)
Actual Enrollment : 530 participants
Allocation: Randomized
Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
Masking: Triple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator)
Primary Purpose: Prevention
Official Title: PERL: A Multicenter Clinical Trial of Allopurinol to Prevent GFR Loss in T1D
Actual Study Start Date : February 2014
Actual Primary Completion Date : July 15, 2019
Actual Study Completion Date : August 31, 2019

Resource links provided by the National Library of Medicine


Arm Intervention/treatment
Experimental: Allopurinol
Oral allopurinol at a dose of 100 mg per day for 4 weeks and then at a dose ranging from 200 to 400 mg per day depending on kidney function
Drug: Allopurinol
Placebo Comparator: Placebo
Oral placebo tablets
Drug: Placebo
Inactive oral tablets identical in appearance to allopurinol tablets.




Primary Outcome Measures :
  1. iGFR at the End of the Wash-out Period [ Time Frame: End of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period (week 164) ]
    Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) at the end of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period, measured by the plasma disappearance of non-radioactive iohexol (iGFR) and adjusted for the iGFR at baseline.


Secondary Outcome Measures :
  1. eGFR at 4 Months of Treatment [ Time Frame: 4 months after randomization (week 16) ]
    Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) at 4 months after randomization, estimated from serum creatinine and cystatin C and adjusted for the eGFR at baseline.

  2. iGFR the End of Treatment Period [ Time Frame: End of the 3-yr treatment period (week 156) ]
    Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) at the end of the 3-year treatment period, measured by the plasma disappearance of non-radioactive iohexol (iGFR) and adjusted for the iGFR at baseline.

  3. iGFR Time Trajectory [ Time Frame: Weeks 0, 80, 156, and 164 (from baseline to the end of washout period) ]
    Glomerular filtration rate time trajectory estimated from iohexol disappearance GFR (iGFR) measurements at weeks 0, 80, 156, and 164. iGFR slopes were estimated by a linear mixed-effects model for longitudinal iGFR measures using a multiple imputation technique for missing values. Positive values denote increasing GFR over time, negative values denote declining iGFR over time.

  4. eGFR Time Trajectory [ Time Frame: Weeks 0, 4, 16, 32, 48, 64, 80, 96, 112, 128, 156, and 164 (from baseline to the end of washout period) ]
    Glomerular filtration rate time trajectory from baseline to end of the 2-month wash-out period (week 164) estimated from quarterly serum creatinine measurements (eGFR). eGFR slopes were estimated by a linear mixed-effects model for longitudinal eGFR measures using a multiple imputation technique for missing values. Positive values denote increasing eGFR over time, negative values denote declining eGFR over time.

  5. Serum Creatinine Doubling or End Stage Renal Disease (ESRD) [ Time Frame: Up to the end of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period (Week 0 to Week 164) ]
    Risk of serum creatinine doubling or end stage renal disease (ESRD) in the allopurinol arm as compared to placebo. Results are expressed as the number of participants who experienced an event in each treatment group. The risk of an event in the allopurinol group as compared to the risk in the placebo group is expressed as hazard ratio (estimated by means of proportional hazard regression).

  6. AER at the End of the Wash-out Period [ Time Frame: End of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period (week 164) ]
    Geometric mean of two urinary albumin excretion (AER) measurements at the end of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period, adjusted for the mean urinary AER at baseline. Results are expressed as least square means of the geometric means in each subject in each group.

  7. AER at the End of the Treatment Period [ Time Frame: Last three months of treatment period (Weeks 142 and 156) ]
    Geometric mean of urinary albumin excretion rate (AER) during the last three months of the treatment period (Visits 15 and 16), adjusted for the mean urinary AER at baseline. Results are expressed as least square means of the geometric means in each subject in each group.

  8. Fatal or Non-fatal Cardiovascular Events [ Time Frame: Up to the end of the 2-month wash-out period following the 3-year treatment period (week 0 to 164) ]
    Risk of cardiovascular events defined as the composite of CVD death (ICD-10 code I10 to I74.9), myocardial infarction, stroke (ischemic or hemorrhagic), coronary artery bypass grafting, or percutaneous coronary intervention in the allopurinol arm as compared to placebo.Results are expressed as the number of participants who experienced an event in each treatment group. The risk of an event in the allopurinol group as compared to the risk in the placebo group is expressed as hazard ratio (estimated by means of proportional hazard regression).



Information from the National Library of Medicine

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Layout table for eligibility information
Ages Eligible for Study:   18 Years to 70 Years   (Adult, Older Adult)
Sexes Eligible for Study:   All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:   No
Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Male or female subjects with type 1 diabetes continuously treated with insulin within one year from diagnosis
  • Duration of T1D ≥ 8 years
  • Age 18-70 years
  • History or presence of microalbuminuria or moderate macroalbuminuria, or evidence of declining kidney function regardless of history or presence of albuminuria and/or RAS Blocker treatment. Micro- or moderate macroalbuminuria will be defined as at least two out of three consecutive urinary albumin excretion rates [AERs] or albumin creatinine ratios [ACRs] taken at any time during the two years before screening or at screening in the 30-5000 mg/24 hr (20-3333 ug/min) or 30-5000 mg/g range, respectively, if not on RASB agents, or in the 18-5000 mg/24 hr (12-3333 ug/min) or 18-5000 mg/g range, respectively, if on RASB agents). Evidence of declining kidney function will be defined as an eGFR (CKD-EPI) decline ≥3.0 ml/min/1.73 m2/year, estimated from the slope derived from all the available serum creatinine measurements (including the one at screening assessment) from the previous 3 years. If at least 3 serum creatinine measures are not available in the previous 3 years, then the slope can be derived from creatinine values from the previous 5 years.
  • Estimated GFR (eGFR) based on serum creatinine between 40 and 99.9 ml/min/1.73 m2 at screening. The upper and the lower limits should be decreased by 1 ml/min/1.73 m2 for each year over age 60 (with a lower limit of 35 ml/min/1.73m2) and by 10 ml/min/1.73 m2 for strict vegans.
  • Serum UA (UA) ≥ 4.5 mg/dl at screening

Exclusion Criteria:

  • History of gout or xanthinuria or other indications for uric acid lowering therapy such as cancer chemotherapy.
  • Recurrent renal calculi.
  • Use of urate-lowering agents within 2 months before screening.
  • Current use of azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, didanosine, warfarin, tamoxifen, amoxicillin/ampicillin, or other drugs interacting with allopurinol.
  • Known allergy to xanthine-oxidase inhibitors or iodine containing substances.
  • HLA B*58:01 positivity (tested before randomization).
  • Renal transplant.
  • Non-diabetic kidney disease.
  • SBP>160 or DBP >100 mmHg at screening or SBP>150 or DBP>95 mmHg at the end of the run-in period.
  • Cancer treatment (excluding non-melanoma skin cancer treated by excision) within two years before screening.
  • History of clinically significant hepatic disease including hepatitis B or C and/or persistently elevated serum liver enzymes at screening and/or history of HBV/HCV positivity.
  • History of acquired immune deficiency syndrome or human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection.
  • Hemoglobin concentration <11 g/dL (males), <10 g/dL (females) at screening.
  • Platelet count <100,000/mm3 at screening.
  • History of alcohol or drug abuse in the past 6 months.
  • Blood donation in the 3 months before screening.
  • Breastfeeding or pregnancy or unwillingness to be on contraception throughout the trial.
  • Poor mental function or any other reason to expect patient difficulty in complying with the requirements of the study.
  • Serious pre-existing medical problems other than diabetes, e.g. congestive heart failure, pulmonary insufficiency.

Information from the National Library of Medicine

To learn more about this study, you or your doctor may contact the study research staff using the contact information provided by the sponsor.

Please refer to this study by its ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (NCT number): NCT02017171


Locations
Show Show 30 study locations
Sponsors and Collaborators
Alessandro Doria
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
Joslin Diabetes Center
University of Minnesota
University of Colorado, Denver
University of Michigan
University of Toronto
Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine
Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Steno Diabetes Center Copenhagen
Washington University School of Medicine
University of Washington
Emory University
University of Calgary
University of Alberta
University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
BCDiabetes.Ca
Investigators
Layout table for investigator information
Principal Investigator: Alessandro Doria, MD, PhD, MPH Joslin Diabetes Center
Principal Investigator: Michael Mauer, MD University of Minnesota
  Study Documents (Full-Text)

Documents provided by Alessandro Doria, Joslin Diabetes Center:
Study Protocol  [PDF] March 6, 2018
Statistical Analysis Plan  [PDF] August 3, 2019

Additional Information:
Publications:
Publications automatically indexed to this study by ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier (NCT Number):
Layout table for additonal information
Responsible Party: Alessandro Doria, Investigator, Joslin Diabetes Center
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT02017171    
Obsolete Identifiers: NCT01575379
Other Study ID Numbers: DK101108
UC4DK101108-01 ( U.S. NIH Grant/Contract )
First Posted: December 20, 2013    Key Record Dates
Results First Posted: November 20, 2020
Last Update Posted: December 4, 2020
Last Verified: October 2020
Keywords provided by Alessandro Doria, Joslin Diabetes Center:
Kidney Diseases
Diabetic Nephropathies
Diabetes Mellitus
Diabetes Complications
Uric acid
Allopurinol
Glomerular filtration rate
Coronary artery disease
Additional relevant MeSH terms:
Layout table for MeSH terms
Kidney Diseases
Diabetic Nephropathies
Coronary Artery Disease
Myocardial Ischemia
Coronary Disease
Heart Diseases
Cardiovascular Diseases
Arteriosclerosis
Arterial Occlusive Diseases
Vascular Diseases
Urologic Diseases
Female Urogenital Diseases
Female Urogenital Diseases and Pregnancy Complications
Urogenital Diseases
Male Urogenital Diseases
Diabetes Complications
Diabetes Mellitus
Endocrine System Diseases
Allopurinol
Antimetabolites
Molecular Mechanisms of Pharmacological Action
Enzyme Inhibitors
Gout Suppressants
Antirheumatic Agents
Free Radical Scavengers
Antioxidants
Protective Agents
Physiological Effects of Drugs