Effects of Intravenous [Pyr1]Apelin-13 on Healthy Volunteers With Artificially Induced SIAD

Last updated: March 28, 2025
Sponsor: University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland
Overall Status: Completed

Phase

N/A

Condition

Hyponatremia

Treatment

Placebo

Apelin Low Dose

Selected Apelin Dose

Clinical Study ID

NCT06277336
2023-01716; kt23ChristCrain3
  • Ages 18-65
  • All Genders
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

Hyponatremia is a common electrolyte imbalance which often results from hormonal disregulation. The study aims to investigate whether the apelin hormone, which plays a role in regulating salt and water balance in the body, can be used to treat hyponatremia.

The study will involve healthy volunteers who will be given a medication that causes their bodies to retain water, thus inducing a temporary hyponatremia state. The researchers will measure the volunteers' blood and urine electrolyte levels to see how these are influenced by apelin administration. As comparison, the same measurements will be done in volunteers dosed with placebo instead of apelin.

The researchers believe that apelin may be able to help to correct hyponatremia by increasing urine output. If the study focused in the healthy volunteers population is successful, the investigators will assess the effect of apelin administration in patients with chronic hyponatremia.

The study's hypothesis is that intravenous apelin will increase urinary excretion and sodium levels in healthy participants with artificially induced hyponatremia.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Healthy Volunteers:

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Informed consent as documented by signature

  • Age 18 to 65 years

  • Serum sodium level 135-145mmol/l

  • Clinically euvolemic status

  • For female only: Due to the influence of estrogen on apelin levels, only femaleswith combined (=containing estrogen) oral contraceptive pill will be included inorder to guarantee a similar estrogen levels at each visit.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Known or suspected allergy to trial product or related products or history ofmultiple and/or severe allergic reaction to drugs (including study drugs) or food

  • Pregnancy, wish to become pregnant during study period or breastfeeding

  • Overt cardiovascular disease or abnormality in screening ECG

  • Family history of sudden cardiac death or unexplained sudden death < 50 years

  • Known genetic predisposition to cancer (e.g., BRCA, MEN, Lynch syndrome) or personalhistory/active malignant disease

  • Hepatic impairment (ALAT/ASAT >3x upper limit) or liver cirrhosis

  • Kidney disease (GFR < 60ml/min)

  • History of epileptic seizures

  • Diabetes mellitus type 1 or 2

  • Other severe disease requiring regular medication intake or regular medical care

  • Any daily medication (including vitamin supplements).

  • Uncontrolled hypertension (systolic blood pressure >160mmHg or diastolic bloodpressure >100 mmHg)

  • BMI <18 or >29kg/m2

  • Inability to follow the procedures of the study (e.g. due to language problems,psychological disorders, dementia).

  • Participation in another study with an investigational drug within the 30 dayspreceding and during the present study.

Chronic SIAD patients:

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Age ≥ 18 years

  • Previous documented diagnosis of chronic SIAD

  • Confirmed diagnosis of SIAD at screening visit defined as:

  • Plasma sodium concentration < 135 mmol/L (indirect measurement in lithiumheparin plasma

  • Plasma osmolality < 300 mOsm/kg

  • Urine osmolality > 100 mOsm/kg

  • Urine sodium concentration > 30mmol/l

  • Clinical euvolemia, defined as an absence of signs of hypovolemia (orthostasis,tachycardia, decreased skin turgor, dry mucous membranes) or hypervolemia (edema, ascites)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Known or suspected allergy to trial product or related products or history ofmultiple and/or severe allergic reaction to drugs (including study drugs) or food.

  • Pregnancy, wish to become pregnant during study period or breastfeeding

  • Overt cardiovascular disease or abnormality in screening ECG

  • Other potential endocrine cause of hyponatraemia:

  • Untreated glucocorticoid deficiency (Defined as morning serum cortisol levels < 300 nmol/l or serum cortisol levels < 450 nmol/l after synacthen test, incontext of compatible clinical examination and medical history)

  • Untreated severe hypothyroidism (TSH > 20 mIU/L and/or free T4 < 6 pmol/L)

  • Family history of sudden cardiac death or unexplained sudden death < 50 years

  • Known genetic predisposition to cancer (e.g., BRCA, MEN, Lynch syndrome, ...) orpersonal history/active malignant disease

  • Hepatic impairment (ALAT/ASAT > 3x upper limit) or liver cirrhosis

  • Kidney disease (GFR < 60ml/min)

  • History of epileptic seizures

  • Diabetes mellitus type 1 or 2

  • Severe immunosuppression defined as leukocytes < 2G

  • End of life care

  • Severe symptomatic hyponatremia in need of treatment with 3% NaCl-solution or inneed of intensive/intermediate care treatment at time of inclusion

  • Risk factors for osmotic demyelination syndrome: hypokalemia (K < 3,4 mmol/L),malnutrition, advanced liver disease, alcoholism.

  • Treatment with a diuretic, a SGLT2 inhibitor or a corresponding combinedpreparation, lithium chloride, urea, vaptans, demeclocycline or NSAIDS in the 7 daysbefore screening (aspirin may be continued).

  • Uncontrolled hypertension (systolic blood pressure > 160mmHg or diastolic bloodpressure > 100 mmHg)

  • BMI < 18 or > 29kg/m2

  • Inability to follow the procedures of the study, e.g. due to language problems,psychological disorders, dementia, etc. of the participant

  • Participation in another study with investigational drug within the 30 dayspreceding and during the present study

Study Design

Total Participants: 15
Treatment Group(s): 4
Primary Treatment: Placebo
Phase:
Study Start date:
March 01, 2024
Estimated Completion Date:
March 18, 2025

Study Description

Hyponatremia (defined as plasma sodium levels <135 mmol/l) is the most frequent electrolyte and fluid disturbance with a prevalence up to 30% in hospitalized patients. It is usually classified according to its duration, its biochemical findings (hypotonic/isotonic/hypertonic, mild/moderate/profound), its symptoms severity (mild/moderate/severe) and volume status (hypovolemic/euvolemic/hypervolemic). Chronic hyponatremia (defined as a duration > 48 hours) is associated with longer hospital stays and higher hospital costs, increased mortality and morbidity, such as gait instability, falls, osteoporosis, fractures and attention deficit. Hyponatremia is recognized as a marker of poor prognosis in multiple diseases, but the extent of its causative role has not been quantified to date. There is increasing evidence that correcting hyponatremia could improve clinical outcome.

The most common etiology of euvolemic hyponatremia is the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuresis (SIAD) which is also the main etiology of hyponatremia overall. SIAD is characterized by an imbalanced arginine vasopressin (AVP) secretion or an increased renal AVP sensitivity. This leads to free water retention, thereupon to extracellular volume expansion and a subsequent renal sodium loss resulting in hypotonic hyponatremia. Patients with SIAD are usually older adults with many comorbidities and polypharmacy making physiological studies difficult to interpret due to many possible confounders. To overcome this limitation, the investigators designed a protocol of artificial SIAD induction in healthy volunteers through administration of desmopressin and water loading.This model allowed us to develop the use of the SGLT2 inhibitors empagliflozin as a promising treatment option for SIAD.

The apelin receptor is a g-protein coupled receptor whose structure resembles the angiotensin 2 type 1 receptor. It has two endogenous ligands apelin and elabela, whose different isoforms are present in different organs and are thought to work in an autocrine/paracrine manner. Apelin is, inter alia, expressed in the magnocellular neurons of the hypothalamic supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei together with AVP and oxytocin.

Apelin has a broad spectrum of beneficial physiological effects and thus represents an attractive new target in many medical fields. For instance, it naturally displays vasodilatatory and inotropic effects and promotes glucose uptake and lipolysis. In salt and water homeostasis, apelin counteracts the effects of AVP by inhibiting central AVP release and AVP renal effect, as well as by antagonizing the vasoconstrictive effects of angiotensin II on renal afferent arterioles and increasing renal blood flow.

AVP and apelin have been shown to change in opposite directions upon hypo- and hyperosmotic challenges in healthy humans. A cross-sectional study in hyponatremic patients with SIAD or heart failure suggests that not only an increased copeptin (surrogate stoichiometric marker of AVP) but also relative insufficient apelin levels contribute to renal water reabsorption in hyponatremia. Re-establishing a physiological copeptin apelin ratio by administering exogenous apelin could therefore restore a normal salt and water balance. This concept was tested in hyponatremic rats in which an apelin-17 analog increased urine output, decreased urine osmolality and increased sodium levels to a similar extent as tolvaptan. These results suggest that apelin could become an effective treatment for SIAD, once a long-acting analog will be developed for human use. However, whether a similar effect could be induced in humans is still not known and needs to be investigated in order to characterize apelin physiology in disorders of salt and water balance.

The investigators therefore hypothesize, that the administration of intravenous [Pyr1]apelin-13, the most common apelin isoform in the blood, increases urinary excretion and thus sodium levels in healthy participants with artificially induced SIAD. In case the hypothesis is confirmed, the investigators aim to investigate the physiological effect of intravenous [Pyr1]apelin-13 administration in hyponatremic patients with chronic SIAD.

Connect with a study center

  • University Hospital Basel

    Basel, 4031
    Switzerland

    Site Not Available

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