Affiliation:
1. Department of Internal Medicine, East Carolina University School of Medicine Greenville, North Carolina
2. Department of Neurology, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine Springfield, Illinois
Abstract
Despite numerous attempts over 16 years, the results of aldose reductase inhibitor (ARI) trials for the treatment of diabetic neuropathy have not proven efficacy. This paper reviews each of the ARI trials, examines confounding factors, and proposes a future course. The confounding factors considered are pharmacokinetics (ARI penetration of human nerve), length of trial (in terms of the natural history of diabetic neuropathy), trial endpoints (reversibility or slowing of progression), reproducibility of clinical measurements (in terms of power calculations), standardization and quality control of endpoints, and clinically meaningful differences in endpoints. We conclude that ARIs are most likely to have a beneficial effect in the management of diabetic distal symmetrical polyneuropathy and autonomic neuropathy but that the clinical role of ARIs is to slow the progression of diabetic neuropathy rather than to reverse it. Future trials should be designed with adequate statistical power, with consideration of the variability of the endpoint measurements for long enough duration, and with rigorous quality control to definitively confirm the utility of ARIs in the treatment of diabetic distal symmetrical polyneuropathy and autonomic neuropathy.
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
Cited by
172 articles.
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