PrOphylaxis With mEtformin to pREvent PTDM: a single site, placebo controlled, double blind randomised clinical trial evaluating the effectiveness of metformin to prevent post-transplant diabetes in a cohort of patients undergoing renal transplantation.
Renal transplantation is the optimal form of renal-replacement therapy in end-stage kidney disease. However, up to 30% of new renal transplants develop post-transplant diabetes mellitus (PTDM). The development of PTDM is associated with adverse graft and patient survival outcomes and represents an increased financial burden. There is an urgent clinical need to discover therapies which could decrease the risk of developing PTDM. Metformin offers a safe and cheap therapeutic option which has been demonstrated to reduce the incidence of type 2 diabetes in a high-risk non-transplant patient group. The investigators propose to study its safety and efficacy in preventing the development of PTDM. POWERED is a single site, placebo-controlled, double- blind randomised clinical trial of metformin in patients without pre-existing diabetes mellitus who have received a new renal transplant. Eligible, consented patients are randomised to a 3 month course of either active drug or placebo within 10 days post-transplant. All patients will receive the usual standard of care for transplant patients. Clinical and laboratory data will be collected and assessed at baseline and throughout their participation in the study. The primary endpoint is the development of PTDM as defined by a positive oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). Secondary endpoints include graft outcomes, pancreatic b-cell function and safety endpoints. The study began recruitment in January 2019 and plans to enrol 60 patients. There are no interim analyses planned. Ethical approval was obtained from the London - Brighton and Sussex Ethics Committee (REC 18/LO/0958) prior to commencing the study. All study-related data will be used by the Sponsor in accordance with local data protection law. Results of the trial will be submitted for publication in a peer-reviewed journal.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
60
Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust
London, United Kingdom
Diagnosis of post-transplant diabetes
Positive 2 hour oral glucose tolerance test (i.e. 2 hour sugar \>11.1 mol/L)
Time frame: 12 months post-renal transplant
Pancreatic beta cell function
change in calculated HOMA-IR using C-peptide measurement between baseline and month 3 using
Time frame: 12 months
HbA1c
HbA1c
Time frame: 12 months
impaired glucose tolerance
impaired glucose tolerance as per 2 hour oral glucose tolerance test (i.e. 2 hour glucose 7.9-11.1 mmol/L)
Time frame: 12 months
patient and graft survival
patient survival, kidney transplant (graft) survival
Time frame: 12 months
incidence of treatment emergent adverse events
patient safety: adverse events, serious adverse events
Time frame: 12 months
rejection
episodes of acute transplant rejection
Time frame: 12 months
eGFR
renal transplant function
Time frame: 12 months
diagnosis of PTDM in OGTT screen fails
incidence of PTDM in patients not randomised to study due to positive OGTT at screening: defined by appearance of PTDM on problem list or prescription of an anti-diabetic drug
Time frame: 12 months
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.