Pramlintide lowered glucose excursions and was well-tolerated in adolescents with type 1 diabetes: results from a randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study.

2009 
Objectives To evaluate the pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety, and tolerability of pramlintide in treating adolescents with type 1 diabetes. Study design Twelve subjects (9 females, 3 males, age 12 to 17 years; A1C, 8.4%; body mass index, 25 kg/m 2 ) were randomized to pramlintide (15 or 30 μg) or placebo administered before a standardized breakfast. Insulin lispro (50% of usual mealtime dose) was injected separately. Acetaminophen (1000 mg) was administered orally to provide an indicator of gastric emptying rate. Results In 9 evaluable subjects, plasma pramlintide concentrations increased dose-proportionately; mean peak plasma concentration (C max ) (15-μg dose, 93 ± 9 pg/mL; 30-μg dose, 202 ± 21 pg/mL) occurred ∼0.3 h (median time to peak concentration) after administration. Pramlintide reduced incremental area under the concentration curve (AUC 0-3h ) for glucagon and glucose versus placebo (glucagon: 15-μg dose, 4 ± 7 pg ∗ h/mL; 30-μg dose, 5 ± 7 pg ∗ h/mL; placebo, 35 ± 9 pg ∗ h/mL; glucose: 15-μg dose, 129 ± 43 mg ∗ h/dL; 30-μg dose, 132 ± 37 mg ∗ h/dL; placebo, 217 ± 56 mg ∗ h/dL). Acetaminophen C max decreased with pramlintide; median T max was delayed by ∼2.6- to 3.8-fold. Pramlintide was well tolerated, and no treatment-related adverse events occurred. Conclusions Pramlintide reduced postprandial glucagon and glucose excursions and slowed gastric emptying in adolescents with type 1 diabetes, with no treatment-related adverse events. Long-term studies evaluating the efficacy and safety of pramlintide in adolescents are warranted.
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