This is a pharmacokinetic study (PK Study) to better understand empagliflozin dosing in pediatric Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients. Empagliflozin is currently used off-label in this population due to the mortality benefits seen in adult cardiomyopathy and heart failure. Investigators will perform PK studies in DMD patients of various ages and weights to better understand the PK profile (absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion) and dosing to better treat Duchenne cardiomyopathy.
Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an X-linked skeletal and cardiac myopathy resulting from a defect in the gene coding for dystrophin. DMD myopathy leads to loss of ambulation, respiratory failure, cardiomyopathy (CM), and premature death. There is no cure, and while gene therapies now have approval, their cardiac effects are largely unstudied. Supportive care advances have decreased death from respiratory failure but have simultaneously unmasked the fully penetrant CM phenotype, which is now the leading cause of death in DMD. Investigators have documented that DMD CM progresses from normal imaging to diastolic dysfunction with subtle strain abnormalities to manifest systolic dysfunction; these changes correspond pathologically with myocardial inflammation and progressive increase in myocardial fibrosis and fibrofatty infiltration. Large areas of fibrofatty replacement visible on cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) are felt to be irreversible, meaning that for optimal benefit, therapy must begin before these changes have occurred. Guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT) is increasingly applied in DMD CM care, but individual response to these therapies is suboptimal and often only serves to minimally delay the inevitable progression to heart failure and early death. There is a critical need for the application of new CM therapeutics in DMD. Sodium/glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2i) have resulted in mortality benefits in adult CM. The mechanism of this beneficial effect is unknown, but several factors translating to DMD suggest that SGLT2i could have potential for DMD CM: 1) improved cardiac energetics and metabolism; 2) improved mitochondrial function and reduced oxidative stress; 3) reduction in inflammation; 4) inhibition of myocardial fibrosis; 5) reduction in sarcoplasmic calcium leak; 6) improved sympathetic overdrive. While the use of SGLT2i in pediatric patients with significant LV dysfunction has become more common, there are many significant unanswered questions. PK data are limited, and many patients are dosed based on glucosuria, which is not a proven method to determine efficacy or exclude side-effects. The potential for earlier therapy in DMD, before irreversible changes, is immense; however, an understanding of appropriate dosing for children with DMD is necessary before this can be achieved.
SGLT-2 inhibitor will be given once daily by mouth
SGLT-2 inhibitor will be given once daily by mouth
Riley Hospital at Indiana University Health
Indianapolis, Indiana, United States
Medication dose
DMD patients will be given different doses of medication to better understand the most appropriate dosing of medication in this rare disease population. Because age and weight can impact how a DMD patient absorbs and metabolizes medication, the study will include DMD patients of various ages and weights. This includes giving a dose of medication and measuring drug levels in blood over a 24 hour period of time.
Time frame: From enrollment to 12 month analysis
Medication absorption in blood
DMD patients will be given different doses of medication to better understand the most appropriate dosing of medication in this rare disease population. Because age and weight can impact how a DMD patient absorbs medication, the study will include DMD patients of various ages and weights. This includes giving a dose of medication and measuring drug levels in blood over a 24 hour period of time.
Time frame: Enrollment to 12 month analysis
Medication Excretion or Elimination from blood
DMD patients will be given different doses of medication to better understand the most appropriate dosing of medication in this rare disease population. Because age and weight can impact how a DMD patient absorbs and excretes or eliminates a medication, the study will include DMD patients of various ages and weights. This includes giving a dose of medication and measuring drug levels in blood over a 24 hour period of time.
Time frame: Enrollment to 12 months
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Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10