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Glyburide Healthy Volunteer Study

Information source: University of Maryland
Information obtained from ClinicalTrials.gov on December 08, 2011
Link to the current ClinicalTrials.gov record.

Condition(s) targeted: Healthy Volunteers

Intervention: glyburide (Drug); sugar pill (Drug)

Phase: Phase 1

Status: Recruiting

Sponsored by: University of Maryland

Official(s) and/or principal investigator(s):
Grant V Bochicchio, MD, MPH, Principal Investigator, Affiliation: University of Maryland Medical Center

Overall contact:
Stacey A Reese, RN, BSN, Phone: 410-328-7173, Email: sreese@stapa.umm.edu

Summary

Glyburide is a medication that has been safely used for several decades to treat non-insulin dependent diabetes. This pilot study seeks to support the hypothesis that glyburide, administered at the lowest dose (1. 5 mg/dL daily) to healthy (non-diabetic) subjects is safe both physically and cognitively. The investigators are hopeful that the results of this study will provide the necessary foundation to evaluate this medication's use on a larger scale to determine the feasibility of using glyburide in soldiers either prophylactically or for treatment of brain injury.

Clinical Details

Official title: Glyburide Healthy Volunteer Study

Study design: Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Treatment

Primary outcome: Safety and tolerability of glyburide in healthy volunteers

Secondary outcome:

cognitive impact

impact on performance/dexterity

Detailed description: This study is a placebo controlled (2: 1 drug vs. placebo), randomized clinical trial of 21 healthy, non-diabetic volunteers receiving daily doses of oral glyburide (1. 5 mg) vs. placebo while under careful medical monitoring in an inpatient General Clinical Research Center (GCRC) at the University of Maryland Medical Center, for a duration of 7 days and nights (24 hours per day). Interested subjects who call for more information about the study will be scheduled for a screening visit. Subjects will participate first in an informed consent process, and those wishing to take part will be asked to undergo a comprehensive interview detailing their past medical history and formal physical examination (which includes laboratory tests of the urine and blood). If a subject is deemed appropriate by the team, he/she will be asked to perform an exercise test (treadmill for 30 minutes) and will have an Electrocardiogram (ECG) completed to further determine eligibility. Individuals who do not meet inclusion criteria based on screening activities will be notified immediately that they are not eligible. Volunteers meeting all eligibility criteria will be scheduled for the week long in-patient evaluation.

Each subject will undergo a battery of physical, cognitive, and laboratory tests in addition to receiving oral glyburide or placebo each day for one week.

Eligibility

Minimum age: 18 Years. Maximum age: 40 Years. Gender(s): Both.

Criteria:

Inclusion Criteria:

1. Volunteers between the ages of 18 and 40.

2. Have a Body Mass Index (BMI) between 18-30.

3. Normal screening physical examination (non-pregnant as confirmed by serum Beta HcG, non-diabetic as confirmed by normal Hgb A-1C, normal baseline ECG and vital signs, laboratory values within normal limits. The lab tests include: complete blood count, electrolytes, liver function tests, kidney function tests, uric acid, cholesterol, iron, urinalysis, urine drug screen; all conducted within 2 weeks prior to randomization.

4. Women of Childbearing Potential (WCP) demonstrate a willingness to use contraception methods (other than birth control medications) to prevent pregnancy from time of consent to 30 days past last dose. **Note, birth control medications MAY BE used after completion of the inpatient hospital phase of the study (i. e. after discharge).

5. Unremarkable past medical history.

6. Ability to provide informed consent.

7. Ability to undergo physical exercise (determined through a treadmill exercise test to ensure physical fitness of participants). Those who experience fatigue, dizziness or chest pain during the screening exercise test on the treadmill will be excluded.

8. Ability to undergo neuropsychological test for attention, cognition, dexterity, etc.

9. Willing to remain in the in-patient setting for the duration of the study.

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Use of investigational drug within 4 weeks of study.

2. Using tobacco.

3. Acute illness or surgery within 4 weeks of study.

4. Allergic to sulfonylurea-related drugs.

5. Presence of pathological condition of any part of the body.

6. Any medication within 2 weeks of the study, including oral contraceptives.

7. Ingestion of alcohol or caffeine containing food or beverages within 48 hours of start of study.

8. History of alcohol or drug abuse, cardiac arrhythmias, psychotropic agent use, immunosuppressive condition (i. e. HIV, AIDS, Cancer) or hepatitis.

9. Donation of blood within 3 months or receiving blood products within 14 days.

10. Recent body tattoo or piercing.

Locations and Contacts

Stacey A Reese, RN, BSN, Phone: 410-328-7173, Email: sreese@stapa.umm.edu

University of Maryland General Clinical Research Center (GCRC), Baltimore, Maryland 21210, United States; Recruiting
Stacey Reese, RN, BSN, Phone: 410-328-7173, Email: sreese@stapa.umm.edu
Janna Blankenship, Phone: 410-328-7174, Email: jblankenship@stapa.umm.edu
Additional Information

Starting date: March 2011
Last updated: March 18, 2011

Page last updated: December 08, 2011

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