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RecruitingDiabetes (DM)Diabetic KetoacidosisKetosis Prone Diabetes

Phase 1 Trial of Arginine Hydrochloride for the Management of Diabetic Ketoacidosis in Type 2 Diabetes

Eligible age

18+ yrs

Accepts

All genders

Locations

1 state

Healthy volunteers

No

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About this study

Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) is increasingly recognized in adults with "ketone-prone" type 2 diabetes. In many of these patients, the pancreas can still make insulin but becomes temporarily "stunned" during severe, prolonged high blood sugar. Arginine is a naturally occurring amino acid that can trigger the pancreas to release its own insulin when glucose is high. It is FDA-approved for other uses and has been given intravenously for decades with a strong safety record. Whether a single arginine infusion given early during DKA can safely boost the body's insulin and speed recovery has not been tested. This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 1/2 trial will enroll 60 adults who present to one of four Detroit-area emergency departments with DKA consistent with ketone-prone type 2 diabetes (high glucose and significant ketones). Participants will receive standard DKA care ordered by their clinicians. In addition, under blinded conditions they will receive either arginine hydrochloride 30 grams (in 300 mL) or placebo (normal saline), infused intravenously over 30 minutes as early as feasible after DKA is recognized. The main question is whether arginine increases endogenous (self-made) insulin soon after infusion. We will measure C-peptide (a marker released in equal amounts with insulin) and glucose at 10, 30, and 90 minutes after the start of the infusion and calculate the C-peptide/glucose ratio. Secondary measures include the rate of ketone (β-hydroxybutyrate) clearance and the total insulin dose required in the first 24 hours. Additional blood tests will examine arginine and related amino acids, and a small sample of platelets will be used to explore mitochondrial function. Safety will be closely monitored during and after the infusion, and participants will be contacted at 90 days to assess for any delayed problems. Potential risks include temporary flushing, nausea, or headache; the infusion can be stopped at any time if needed. Potential benefits include faster resolution of ketosis and reduced insulin needs, but benefits cannot be guaranteed for individual participants.

Sponsor: David K Carroll

You may qualify if…

  • Age \>17 years.
  • Unscheduled presentation to a participating emergency department with hyperglycemia (serum glucose \>250 mg/dL) and significant ketonemia consistent with DKA, defined as laboratory serum/plasma β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) \>20 mg/dL (≈≥1.9 mmol/L).
  • Note: point-of-care capillary BHB ≥1.5 mmol/L and/or breath acetone ≥0.01% may be used for screening while confirmatory labs are pending; if confirmatory BHB ≤20 mg/dL, the participant is a screen failure.
  • Clinical phenotype consistent with ketosis-prone type 2 diabetes (no known prior diagnosis of type 1 diabetes).
  • Able to provide written informed consent and comply with study procedures in the ED.

You may not qualify if…

  • Current renal replacement therapy for chronic kidney disease (hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis).
  • Known history of type 1 diabetes mellitus or known GAD65 autoantibody positivity.
  • Diagnosed cirrhosis/advanced chronic liver disease.
  • Pregnancy (known pregnancy or positive test at screening).
  • Known allergy or hypersensitivity to arginine or its components.
  • Features of at least moderate acute alcohol intoxication at screening, per treating team.

Where it's recruiting

Michigan

Detroit

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT07167693 · last updated 2026-02-12

Phase 1 Trial of Arginine Hydrochloride for the Management of Diabetic · TrialPath