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A comparison of the effects of rosiglitazone on endothelial function and arterial stiffness in insulin resistant individuals and normal controls
ISRCTN ISRCTN50847630
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier
Public title A comparison of the effects of rosiglitazone on endothelial function and arterial stiffness in insulin resistant individuals and normal controls
Scientific title
Acronym N/A
Serial number at source N0544093589
Study hypothesis Rosiglitazone: endothelial function and arterial stiffness.
Lay summary Not provided at time of registration
Ethics approval Not provided at time of registration
Study design Randomised controlled trial
Countries of recruitment United Kingdom
Disease/condition/study domain Cardiovascular: Endothelial function and arterial stiffness
Participants - inclusion criteria Not provided at time of registration
Participants - exclusion criteria Not provided at time of registration
Anticipated start date 26/01/2001
Anticipated end date 30/09/2003
Status of trial Stopped
Patient information material
Target number of participants 24 subjects (PROJ 04/12/2000), 12 additional subjects (PROJ 23/03/2001), total 36
Interventions Rosiglitazone has been noted to have effects on the vasculature. We hypothesise that it may improve endothelial function and reduce arterial stiffness. We believe that the effects may be greater in people who are overweight as they tend to have insulin resistance and the actions of rosiglitazone may occur via its insulin-sensitizing effects. The effects may also be partially mediated via nitric oxide dependent mechanisms. We propose to study 12 obese and 12 non-obese subjects. They will be required to attend for three visits, the first of which will last for 30 min and the second and third for around 3 h each. The first visit will be a screening visit during which informed consent will be obtained and inclusion and exclusion criteria checked. Physical examination and medical history will be performed to ensure that it is safe for inclusion in the study. On the second and third visits, measurements of blood pressure, bio-impedance, forearm blood flow and arterial stiffness will be made (all non-invasive). Subjects will then be given a single oral dose of either rosiglitazone 8 mg or placebo. Two hours later, measurements of endothelial function will be made. A 27 gauge needle will be inserted into the left brachial artery under local anaethesia (1% lignocaine). Saline or drugs will be infused at a constant rate of 1.0 ml/min by means of a constant rate infusion pump throughout the duration of the study. Basal blood flow will be recorded after 18 min of 0.9% saline infusion. Acetylcholine will then be co-infused with saline at a dose of 7.5 and 15 ug/min, each dose at 1.0 ml/min for 6 min. There will then be a 18 min washout period during which saline infusion will be given. Sodium nitroprusside will then be co-infused with saline at a dose of 3 and 10 ug/min, each dose at 1.0 ml/min for 6 min. There will then be a further 18 min washout period with saline. L-NG-monomethyl-arginine (L-NMMA) will then be co-infused with saline at a dose of 4 then 8 umol/min, each dose at 1.0 ml/min for 6 min. Further measurements of forearm blood flow will be made during the last 2 min of each infusion period by venous occlusion plethysmography over 1 min. Blood flow will be measured every alternate 3 min for a 3 min period by intermittent inflation of a blood pressure cuff around the upper arm to 40 mmHg. A second cuff will be inflated around the wrist to a pressure of 200 mmHg during measurements of blood flow (maximum duration 3 min) in order to exclude the hand from the circulation during measurements. At the first visit subjects will also undergo measurement of Minimum Forearm Vascular Resistance (MFVR). In order to measure MFVR, a cuff will be inflated around the upper arm to a pressure of 300 mmHg to occlude arterial flow to the forearm for 13 min and then deflated and a measurement of forearm blood flow made by venous occlusion plethysmography. Arterial stiffness will be measured non-invasively using Pulse Wave Analysis (SphygmoCor, PWV Medical, Australia). This involves holding a small pressure sensitive probe against the skin overlying the radial, carotid and femoral arteries in turn. Following the assessment of endothelial function on the second and third visits, subjects will have baseline measurements of arterial stiffness repeated. They will then receive 400 micrograms of salbutamol by inhalation and after values have returned to baseline 500 micrograms of glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) sublingually, with repeat measurements of arterial stiffness immediately after each drug is given. This will allow endothelial function in the large arteries to be assessed. The study will be conducted according to International Conference on Harmonisation (ICH)-Good Clinical Practice (GCP) guidelines.

This trial has stopped due to lack of funding
Primary outcome measure(s) Not provided at time of registration
Secondary outcome measure(s) Not provided at time of registration
Sources of funding Cambridge Consortium - Addenbrooke's (UK)
Trial website
Publications No publication intended. Trial stopped.
Contact name Dr  Ian B  Wilkinson
  Address Clinical Pharmacology Unit
Level 3, ACCI
Box 110
Addenbrooke's NHS Trust
  City/town Cambridge
  Zip/Postcode CB2 2QQ
  Country United Kingdom
  Tel +44 01223-336806
  Fax +44 01223-216893
  Email ibw20@cam.ac.uk
Sponsor Record provided by the NHS Trusts Clinical Trials Register - Department of Health (UK)
  Address The Department of Health
Richmond House
79 Whitehall
  City/town London
  Zip/Postcode SW1A 2NL
  Country United Kingdom
  Tel +44 (0)207 307 2622
  Fax +44 (0)207 307 2623
  Email dhmail@doh.gsi.org.uk
  Sponsor website: http://www.doh.gov.uk
Date applied 12/09/2003
Last edited 27/09/2011
Date ISRCTN assigned 12/09/2003
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