PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Repurposed drug offers new potential for managing type 1 diabetes

Repurposed drug offers new potential for managing type 1 diabetes
2023-11-01
(Press-News.org) INDIANAPOLIS -- A recent study led by Indiana University School of Medicine in collaboration with the University of Chicago Medicine presents exciting future possibilities for the management of type 1 diabetes and the potential reduction of insulin dependency. The researchers’ findings, published in Cell Reports Medicine, suggest repurposing of the drug α-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO) may open doors to innovative therapies in the future.

Type 1 diabetes is a chronic condition wherein the body's immune system mistakenly attacks and destroys the insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreas, leading to high blood sugar levels that currently require lifelong insulin treatment to keep patients alive. Many people living with type 1 diabetes find current treatments, including daily insulin injections and frequent blood sugar monitoring, inconvenient and challenging to manage.

These latest translational results represent more than a decade of research. In 2010, the study’s co-corresponding author, Raghu Mirmira, MD, PhD, was operating a research lab at IU School of Medicine in 2010 when his team initially discovered that inhibiting the metabolic pathway affected by DFMO could safeguard beta cells from environmental factors, suggesting potential preservation in type 1 diabetes. The team subsequently validated these findings in mice.

From 2015 to 2019, Linda DiMeglio, MD, MPH, Edwin Letzter Professor of Pediatrics at IU School of Medicine and a pediatric endocrinologist and division chief at Riley Children's Health, directed a clinical trial that affirmed DFMO's safety in people newly diagnosed with type 1 diabetes and suggested that it might also stabilize insulin levels by safeguarding beta cells. The trial was funded by the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (JDRF) with drug provided by Panbela Therapeutics.

"After several years of bench-to-bedside studies, beginning with Drs. Mirmira and [Sarah] Tersey's mouse models, it's exciting to finally share the promising results from our pilot trial in humans," said DiMeglio, senior author of the study. "Now that we’ve established preliminary safety of DFMO for individuals with type 1 diabetes, we’re thrilled about advancing our collaborative research to explore more of its potential benefits in a larger clinical trial."

Since 1990, DFMO has been FDA-approved as a high-dose injection to treat African Sleeping Sickness, and in 2020 it received a breakthrough therapy designation for neuroblastoma maintenance therapy after remission. This prior regulatory clearance could streamline its adoption as a type 1 diabetes treatment, potentially shortening the approval process from decades to just a few years.

“Using a new formulation of DFMO as a pill allows patients to take it by mouth instead of needing to undergo regular injections, and it has a very favorable side effect profile,” said Mirmira, who is now a professor of medicine and an endocrinologist at UChicago Medicine. “It’s exciting to say we have a drug that works differently from every other treatment we have for this disease.”

The researchers have already initiated their next steps in investigating DFMO’s potential. The study’s first author and co-corresponding author Emily K. Sims, MD, associate professor of pediatrics at IU School of Medicine and a pediatric endocrinologist at Riley Children's Health, recently launched a larger, six-center clinical study to robustly define the impact of DFMO treatment to preserve beta cell function in type 1 diabetes. The new study is also funded by JDRF and supported by Panbela Therapeutics.

Sims, who is also a physician-scientist at the Herman B Wells Center for Pediatric Research and the Center for Diabetes and Metabolic Diseases at IU School of Medicine, is hopeful that DFMO, possibly as part of a combination therapy, will not only help persons recently diagnosed with type 1 diabetes but could also be tested in those at risk of developing the condition.

“As we dive into this new multicenter clinical trial to further investigate the efficacy of DFMO, we're driven by the promising results we've seen so far to modify the underlying disease process in type 1 diabetes,” Sims said. “We invite more participants to join us in this pioneering research. With their help, the knowledge we gain today has the potential to shape a brighter future for those impacted by type 1 diabetes.”

Individuals interested in learning more about the new clinical trial can visit the study’s website.

Other IU authors on the study include Audrey Hull, Stephanie E. Woerner, Teresa L. Mastracci, Susan M. Perkins, Fangqian Ouyang, and Carmella Evans-Molina.

About IU School of Medicine

IU School of Medicine is the largest medical school in the U.S. and is annually ranked among the top medical schools in the nation by U.S. News & World Report. The school offers high-quality medical education, access to leading medical research and rich campus life in nine Indiana cities, including rural and urban locations consistently recognized for livability.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Repurposed drug offers new potential for managing type 1 diabetes

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

UCF hires Director of Development and Operations for Virtual Experience Research Accelerator (VERA)

2023-11-01
UCF Hires Director of Development and Operations for Virtual Experience Research Accelerator (VERA)   ORLANDO, Nov. 1, 2023 – Ali Haskins Lisle, Ph.D., has been named the Director of Development and Operations for the UCF-led Virtual Experience Research Accelerator (VERA). VERA is a nearly $5 million U.S. National Science Foundation project to develop the first large-scale human-machine system for virtual reality human subjects research, with the goals of affording very large studies, very quickly, with populations that ...

Hebrew prayer book fills gap in Italian earthquake history

Hebrew prayer book fills gap in Italian earthquake history
2023-11-01
The chance discovery of a note written in a 15th century Hebrew prayer book fills an important gap in the historical Italian earthquake record, offering a brief glimpse of a previously unknown earthquake affecting the Marche region in the central Apennines. Paolo Galli, who found the note in the Apostolic Vatican Library while looking for contemporaneous accounts of another historic Italian earthquake, writes in Seismological Research Letters that the note “not only helps us partially fill a gap in the seismic history ...

UChicago chemists make breakthrough in drug discovery chemistry

2023-11-01
For years, if you asked the people working to create new pharmaceutical drugs what they wished for, at the top of their lists would be a way to easily replace a carbon atom with a nitrogen atom in a molecule. But two studies from chemists at the University of Chicago, published in Science and Nature, offer two new methods to address this wish. The findings could make it easier to develop new drugs. “This is the grand-challenge problem that I started my lab to try to solve,” said Mark Levin, ...

Docetaxel use associated with significant reduction in prostate cancer death in very poor prognostic group

2023-11-01
Men with high-grade prostate cancer and low prostate-specific antigen (PSA) levels have a poor prognosis. The question remains as to whether the chemotherapy drug docetaxel, which increases survival in metastatic prostate cancer, can improve the cure rate in these patients. In a new study, investigators from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, a meta-analysis of five prospective randomized clinical trials (RCTs) found that adding docetaxel to standard-of-care (SOC) treatment was associated with a 70% reduction in death from prostate cancer-specific ...

Pet ownership may contribute to health care barriers for people with HIV

2023-11-01
People living with HIV may face hard choices when balancing their own health needs with caring for a pet, a study led by a University of Florida College of Public Health and Health Professions researcher finds. For the study, which appears in the journal PLOS ONE, 36% of people with HIV who own pets reported delaying health care, not seeking it or said they expect to do so in the future. Financial and other resource concerns, including not having access to pet sitting or boarding services, are among the leading factors that may contribute to health care barriers among pet owners ...

Test detects co-infection by novel species of parasite in severe cases of visceral leishmaniasis

2023-11-01
In recent years, physicians and scientists in parts of Brazil where visceral leishmaniasis (VL) is endemic have seen rising numbers of cases of co-infection by Leishmania infantum and Crithidia, also a protozoan but hitherto believed to be a mosquito parasite that cannot infect humans or other mammals. Accurate diagnosis is hindered by a lack of simple specific tests (more at: https://agencia.fapesp.br/42072 and https://agencia.fapesp.br/31581).  To accelerate and facilitate detection of the pathogens involved, supporting appropriate decisions regarding treatment, researchers at the Federal University of São Carlos (UFSCar) have developed a PCR test ...

Dr. Zainab Mahmoud to receive the 2023 Dr. Nanette K. Wenger Research Goes Red® Award

2023-11-01
DALLAS, Nov. 1, 2023 – The American Heart Association will present the 2023 Dr. Nanette K. Wenger Research Goes Red® Award to Zainab Mahmoud, M.D., M.Sc., of Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. This award will be presented during the opening session of the Association’s Scientific Sessions 2023 on Saturday, Nov. 11. The meeting, to be held in Philadelphia, Saturday, Nov. 11 through Monday, Nov. 13, is a premier global exchange of the latest scientific advancements, ...

Lepore chosen to lead Public Policy & Aging Report

2023-11-01
The Gerontological Society of America (GSA) — the nation’s largest interdisciplinary organization devoted to the field of aging — has named Michael Lepore, PhD, of the University of Massachusetts (UMass) Amherst as the next editor-in-chief of the journal Public Policy & Aging Report, effective January 2024. “I am honored to serve as editor-in-chief of Public Policy & Aging Report, which for nearly 30 years has provided non-partisan analyses of aging-related policy issues,” Lepore said. “This venerable journal has been a mainstay of my training and professional ...

Dr. Mary McGrae McDermott to be awarded the 2023 Clinical Research Prize

2023-11-01
DALLAS, Nov. 1, 2023 — The American Heart Association will present the 2023 Clinical Research Prize to Mary McGrae McDermott, M.D., FAHA, of Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago. The Clinical Research Prize is awarded annually to physicians or scientists who are advancing clinical science in support of the Association’s mission. Dr. McDermott has dedicated her career to advancing medical knowledge of peripheral artery disease (PAD). She will be recognized during the presidential session on Sunday, Nov. 12, 2023 at the Association’s Scientific Sessions ...

Dr. Olugbenga Ogedegbe to receive the 2023 Population Health Research Prize

2023-11-01
DALLAS, Nov. 1, 2023 — The American Heart Association will present its 2023 Population Health Research Prize to Olugbenga “Gbenga” Ogedegbe, M.D., M.P.H., FAHA, of New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine. He will be recognized during the presidential session of the Association’s Scientific Sessions 2023 on Sunday, Nov. 12. The meeting will be held in Philadelphia, Saturday, Nov. 11 through Monday, Nov. 13 and is a premier global exchange of the latest scientific advancements, research and evidence-based clinical practice updates in cardiovascular science. Dr. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Sloth survival under threat due to climate change, new study finds

Research sheds light on large-scale cosmic structures

Untapped potential: Study shows how water systems can help accelerate renewable energy adoption

Clean energy transition: Increasing global equity with finance

Orbitronics: New material property advances energy-efficient tech

Firearm laws restricting large-capacity magazines effective in reducing child deaths in mass shootings

Black infants with heart abnormalities more likely to die in first year

Dangerous practice ‘chroming’ featured in videos on social media platform popular among youth

Firearm injuries lead to more complications, greater risk of death and higher inpatient costs than other injuries

Racial justice activism, advocacy found to reduce depression, anxiety in some teens

Parents open to firearms counseling from doctors; Ensuring secure storage remains a challenge

Childhood opioid prescription rates vary by patient’s background, research finds

Children in foster care with disabilities face significant challenges

Asthma rates lower in children who received only breast milk at birth hospital

Water-absorbing beads pose increasing hazard for young children; researchers test methods on how to shrink them

Caregivers underestimate suicide as the leading cause of firearm death: study

Anti-bullying, sexual harassment resources increase in US schools but gaps remain

Social media used to facilitate sexual assault in children: new research

Racial disparities exist in emergency department treatment of children with unintentional ingestions

Advances in endovascular therapy for stroke patients

The Lancet Public Health: MMR vaccine remains the best protection against measles - modelling study in England suggests level of protection decreases slightly over time

Babies born after fertility treatment have higher risk of heart defects

New research confirms link between perceived stress and psoriasis relapse

Call to action: A blueprint for change in acute and critical care nursing

Who transports what here?

Fitness loss through spontaneous mutations will not impact viability of human populations in the near future

Prize recognizes discovery of how cell population protects our airways – and keeps them clear

Team led by UMass Amherst debunks research showing Facebook’s news-feed algorithm curbs election misinformation

Science publishes eLetter on 2023 study by Guess et al., as well as response by Guess et al.

Supreme Court ruling could strip protections from up to 90 million acres of US wetlands

[Press-News.org] Repurposed drug offers new potential for managing type 1 diabetes