sirolimus and Goiter--Nodular

sirolimus has been researched along with Goiter--Nodular* in 2 studies

Trials

1 trial(s) available for sirolimus and Goiter--Nodular

ArticleYear
A phase I/IIa double blind single institute trial of low dose sirolimus for Pendred syndrome/DFNB4.
    Medicine, 2020, Volume: 99, Issue:19

    Pendred syndrome (PDS)/DFNB 4 is a disorder with fluctuating and progressive hearing loss, vertigo, and thyroid goiter. We identified pathophysiology of a neurodegenerative disorder in PDS patient derived cochlear cells that were induced via induced pluripotent stem cells and found sirolimus, an mTOR inhibitor, as an inhibitor of cell death with the minimum effective concentration less than 1/10 of the approved dose for other diseases. Given that there is no rational standard therapy for PDS, we planned a study to examine effects of low dose oral administration of sirolimus for the fluctuating and progressive hearing loss, and the balance disorder of PDS by daily monitor of their audio-vestibular symptoms.. This is a phase I/IIa double blind parallel-group single institute trial in patient with PDS/DFNB4. Sixteen of outpatients with fluctuating hearing diagnosed as PDS in SLC26A4 genetic testing aged in between 7 and 50 years old at the time of consent are given either placebo or sirolimus tablet (NPC-12T). In NPC-12T placebo arm, placebo will be given for 36 weeks; in active substance arm, placebo will be given for 12 weeks and the NPC-12T for 24 weeks. Primary endpoints are safety and tolerability. The number of occurrences and types of adverse events and of side effects will be sorted by clinical symptoms and by abnormal change of clinical test results. A 2-sided 95% confidence interval of the incidence rate by respective dosing arms will be calculated using the Clopper-Pearson method. Clinical effects on audio-vestibular tests performed daily and precise physiological test at each visit will also be examined as secondary and expiratory endpoints.. JMA-IIA00361; Pre-results.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Audiometry; Child; Double-Blind Method; Female; Goiter, Nodular; Hearing Loss, Sensorineural; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Sirolimus; Sulfate Transporters; Treatment Outcome; Vestibular Aqueduct; Vestibular Function Tests; Young Adult

2020

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for sirolimus and Goiter--Nodular

ArticleYear
Cochlear Cell Modeling Using Disease-Specific iPSCs Unveils a Degenerative Phenotype and Suggests Treatments for Congenital Progressive Hearing Loss.
    Cell reports, 2017, 01-03, Volume: 18, Issue:1

    Hearing impairments are the most common symptom of congenital defects, and they generally remain intractable to treatment. Pendred syndrome, the most frequent syndromic form of hereditary hearing loss, is associated with mutations in the anion exchanger pendrin. Loss of pendrin function as an anion exchanger is thought to be causative, but rodent models do not exhibit progressive deafness. Here, we report a degenerative phenotype exhibiting mutant pendrin aggregates and increased susceptibility to cellular stresses in cochlear epithelial cells induced from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs). These degenerative phenotypes were rescued by site-specific gene corrections. Moreover, low-dose rapamycin and metformin reduced aggregation and cell death. Our results provide an unexpected, comprehensive understanding of deafness due to "degenerative cochlear disease" and may contribute to rational therapeutic development. This iPSC-based disease model provides an approach to the study of pathogenesis and therapeutic development for hereditary hearing loss.

    Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Cell Line; Child; Child, Preschool; Cochlea; Female; Goiter, Nodular; Hearing Loss; Hearing Loss, Sensorineural; Human Embryonic Stem Cells; Humans; Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells; Infant, Newborn; Ion Exchange; Membrane Transport Proteins; Metformin; Phenotype; Protein Aggregates; Sirolimus; Sulfate Transporters; Vestibular Aqueduct

2017