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ARA 290

Cibinetide, PHBSP, PH-BSP, Helix B surface peptide

Quick Stats
Studies 51
Trials 5
Score 3
2015 pubmed 129 citations

ARA 290, a nonerythropoietic peptide engineered from erythropoietin, improves metabolic control and neuropathic symptoms in patients with type 2 diabetes.

Brines. Michael M; Dunne. Ann N AN; van Velzen. Monique M; Proto. Paolo L PL; Ostenson. Claes-Goran CG; Kirk. Rita I RI; Petropoulos. Ioannis N IN; Javed. Saad S; Malik. Rayaz A RA; Cerami. Anthony A; Dahan. Albert A

Key Findings

  • Daily 4 mg sub‑cutaneous ARA‑290 for 28 days lowered HbA1c and improved lipid profiles in type‑2 diabetes patients.
  • Neuropathic pain scores (PainDetect) improved significantly versus placebo.
  • Corneal nerve fiber density, a marker of small‑fiber neuropathy, increased in participants who had low baseline values.

Practical Outcomes

  • The peptide appears safe and may help both blood‑sugar control and diabetic nerve pain, suggesting it could become a useful adjunct for metabolic health. However, it is still in early clinical testing and not commercially available, so biohackers would need to wait for larger trials or a regulated supply before trying it.

Summary

A short 28‑day study gave people with type‑2 diabetes a daily 4 mg injection of ARA‑290, a tiny peptide made from the part of the hormone erythropoietin that protects tissue but doesn’t raise red blood cells. The treated group saw lower blood‑sugar (HbA1c), better cholesterol numbers, and less nerve‑pain, with no safety problems reported. Nerve health in the eye also improved compared with placebo.

Abstract

Although erythropoietin ameliorates experimental type 2 diabetes with neuropathy, serious side effects limit its potential clinical use. ARA 290, a nonhematopoietic peptide designed from the structure of erythropoietin, interacts selectively with the innate repair receptor that mediates tissue protection. ARA 290 has shown efficacy in preclinical and clinical studies of metabolic control and neuropathy. To evaluate the potential activity of ARA 290 in type 2 diabetes and painful neuropathy, subjects were enrolled in this phase 2 study. ARA 290 (4 mg) or placebo were self-administered subcutaneously daily for 28 d and the subjects followed for an additional month without further treatment. No potential safety issues were identified. Subjects receiving ARA 290 exhibited an improvement in hemoglobin A(1c) (Hb A(1c)) and lipid profiles throughout the 56 d observation period. Neuropathic symptoms as assessed by the PainDetect questionnaire improved significantly in the ARA 290 group. Mean corneal nerve fiber density (CNFD) was reduced significantly compared with normal controls and subjects with a mean CNFD >1 standard deviation from normal showed a significant increase in CNFD compared with no change in the placebo group. These observations suggest that ARA 290 may benefit both metabolic control and neuropathy in subjects with type 2 diabetes and deserves continued clinical evaluation.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2015

Date

2015-03-13T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.2119/molmed.2014.00215

Citations

129

References

42