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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT03741478
PHASE1

Intranasal Insulin and Olanzapine Study in Healthy Volunteers

Sponsor: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Antipsychotic (AP) medications are considered to be the gold standard treatment for psychotic disorders including schizophrenia. However, APs have also been commonly associated with serious metabolic adverse effects including weight gain and Type 2 Diabetes, with younger populations disproportionately affected. In addition, young individuals treated with these agents have also been found to be at high risk for glucose dysregulation, including higher rates of prediabetes, with significant associations found between AP use and insulin resistance. Due to the concerning prevalence of these AP metabolic effects, it becomes important to further elucidate the mechanisms underlying AP effects on glucose metabolism, which are still poorly understood. One potential underlying mechanism is insulin which has been found to regulate hepatic (liver) glucose production through insulin receptors in the brain. These insulin receptors also play a role in neuronal growth and memory, or more broadly, cognition. Preliminary data in rat models has demonstrated that the AP olanzapine (OLA) inhibits the ability of a central insulin stimulus (acting at the level of the brain) to decrease endogenous glucose production (EGP), making this mechanism a prime target to translate from rodent models to human research. Furthermore, intranasal insulin (INI) administration (an analogous central insulin stimulus) has been repeatedly associated with improved cognitive performance for verbal memory and visuospatial functions in humans. Given these findings and with the goal of translational research, the present study will investigate OLA's effects in healthy human volunteers including: (a) the ability of INI to reduce EGP during a pancreatic euglycemic clamp (PEC; a glucose metabolism and insulin procedure); and (b) the ability of INI to improve cognitive performance. More specifically, the present study hypothesizes that: 1. INI will be associated with a decrease in EGP relative to intranasal placebo (INP) as measured by the PEC. This effect will be inhibited if OLA is co-administered. 2. OLA administration will be associated with decrements in cognitive measures (i.e., visuospatial, and verbal memory) as compared to placebo (PL). Additionally, OLA co-administration will block the beneficial effects of INI on cognition previously supported by other studies. 3. INI will result in adaptive changes in neurochemical and neurohemodynamic measures as studied using MRI imaging techniques.

Official title: Effect of Antipsychotics on Central Insulin Action in Relation to Glucose Metabolism and Cognition in Healthy Volunteers

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

17 Years - 45 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

64

Start Date

2019-10-22

Completion Date

2026-07-30

Last Updated

2026-05-27

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DRUG

OLANZapine 2.5 MG

Olanzapine capsules (2.5mg) will be administered with the following dosing schedules for each arm: 1. Metabolic arm - 5mg on Day 0, 7.5mg on Day 1, and 10mg on Day 2 2. Cognitive arm - 5mg on Day 0, 10mg on Day 1

DRUG

Placebo

Placebo capsules visually identical to those containing olanzapine will be administered according to the same dosing schedule for each arm.

DRUG

Insulin Lispro 100 UNT/ML

Intranasal insulin spray (or placebo) will be administered on day 2 for each arm. For the metabolic arm: 40 IU of intranasal insulin lispro will be administered at timepoint 0 during the pancreatic euglycemic clamp procedure. For the cognitive arm: 160 IU of intranasal insulin lispro will be administered at about 11 am on day 2 prior to the MRI imaging and cognitive testing procedures.

OTHER

Saline

Placebo saline spray visually identical to the intranasal insulin spray will be administered on day 2 for each arm according the same dosing schedules.

Locations (2)

University Health Network - Toronto General Hospital

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Center for Addiction and Mental Health

Toronto, Ontario, Canada