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Recognized by the American Diabetes Association, the
Texas Diabetes Institute, located in San Antonio, Texas, provides unsurpassed comprehensive
care for patients with diabetes. Its Clinical Research
Center has been involved in the early stages of research
on new antidiabetic medications that have been approved
by the FDA for the management of diabetes in the United
States and throughout the world. Metformin (Glucophage),
the most commonly prescribed drug for the treatment
of the Type 2 diabetes today was introduced and disseminated
in the U.S. after results of extensive studies performed
by Professor Ralph A. DeFronzo, M.D., Principal Investigator
for the US Multicenter Metformin Trials, and Deputy
Director of the Texas Diabetes Institute. In addition,
since 1993 seminal investigations conducted at the
Texas Diabetes Institute have led the way to the widespread
use of other safe efficacious agents (Pioglitazone,
Rosiglitazone, Atorvastatin, Losartan, Nateglinide,
novel Insulin Analogs, and others) in the fight against
diabetes and its complications.
A major research mission of the Texas Diabetes Institute has focused on identification of Type 2 diabetes genes that contribute to a person’s genetic susceptibility to develop Type 2 diabetes mellitus in the
Mexican American Community. In the Hispanic community, if both parents have diabetes, there is a 70-80% chance
that their children will develop diabetes. If only one parent has diabetes, there is a 30-40% chance that
the children will develop diabetes. Lack of physical activity, obesity, and a high fat diet are important
contributing factors, which can magnify the genetic tendency and lead to overt diabetes. Unraveling the
genetic code that causes Type 2 diabetes in Mexican-Americans is the principal aim of a large ongoing study
under the leadership of Professor Ralph A. DeFronzo.
Dr. Ralph DeFronzo's legacy has been involved in clinical research for over 30 years, starting as a
medical student with Professor George Cahill at the Joslin Clinic and Harvard Medical School in Boston.
He has published over 400 articles and book chapters on topics ranging from the basic biochemical and
molecular mechanisms responsible for insulin resistance and impaired insulin secretion in Type 2 diabetes to the day-to-day treatment of people with diabetes. Dr. DeFronzo is a coeditor of the ADA Physicians’
Guide for the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus and coeditor of the International Textbook of Diabetes
Mellitus. Dr. DeFronzo has received numerous awards and recognitions during his career, including the
prestigious Lilly Award by the American Diabetes Association (ADA). This award is given to the
Outstanding Investigator in North America. He also has received the Albert Renold Award from the ADA for
his lifetime commitment to the training of young diabetes investigators. In 2003, at the annual ADA meeting,
he received the Novartis Award as the Outstanding Clinical Investigator in North America and Europe.
After his truly seminal findings regarding the role of insulin resistance in the pathogenesis of Type 2
diabetes, Dr. Ralph DeFronzo’s latest quest centers on genetic research, an exciting discovery process
that hopefully will lead to a cure for Type 2 diabetes mellitus.
The Texas Diabetes Institute Clinical Research Program
and accomplishments includes a wide range of novel
and exciting investigative protocols involving the
basic etiology of Type 2 diabetes mellitus, the metabolic
syndrome, obesity, hypertension, and diabetic nephropathy,
as well as the development of new medications to treat
patients with diabetes mellitus and its varied complications.
Studies are being conducted to identify the biochemical
and molecular defects responsible for Type 2 diabetes in muscle, liver, and adipocytes and to assess the
efficacy and mechanism of action of new drugs in the
treatment of the disease. Investigations concerning
novel insulin secretagogues and non-invasive glucose
monitoring techniques, as well as new drugs for the
treatment of lipid disorders, atherosclerosis, kidney
disease, and hypertension in patients with diabetes
currently are underway. Clinical research aimed at
understanding the efficacy of exercise and other strategies
to prevent cardiovascular disease in diabetes also
is being conducted.
The Diabetes Clinical Research Center is a premier clinical investigative unit that is recognized
throughout the world. Clinical Research Fellowships, ranging from 2-4 years, are available through stipends
provided by the American Diabetes Association, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, National Institutes
of Health, and numerous pharmaceutical companies. Between 4-8 clinical research fellows per year participate
in a wide variety of research programs designed to define the molecular and biochemical abnormalities
responsible for Type 2 diabetes and to develop innovative methods for the treatment of diabetes mellitus
and its complications. More than 50 physician-scientists and other health care professionals have trained
in the Texas Diabetes Institute and now are working in prestigious academic centers, public and private
organizations, and medical facilities in the U.S. and abroad. Many continue to collaborate closely with
Dr. DeFronzo and other investigators at the Texas Diabetes Institute. Exchange programs and research
activities are maintained with the Joslin Clinic in Boston, MA, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
in Nashville, TN, the University of Pisa Medical School, Pisa, Italy, and Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm,
Sweden, to name a few.
Most research activities initiated by the Texas Diabetes Institute are covered by local papers,
including The San Antonio Express News and La Prensa, and by the major TV/Radio media channels in San Antonio
and in the State of Texas. Study results have been published in prestigious, well-recognized scientific
journals including: The New England Journal of Medicine, The Journal of Clinical Investigation, Journal
of Biological Chemistry, Diabetes, Diabetes Care, Nature, Science, American Journal of Physiology, Annals
of Internal Medicine, and many others. The Texas Diabetes Institute frequently receives national and
international distinguished visitors, who are interested in our “model” research facility.
To learn more about our research center, you can email
or call us at (210) 358-7200. Return to top |