Table of contents
- Trial overview
- Who was studied
- What the study measured
- Trial phase and status
- Treatments being compared
- Patient-friendly terms
Trial overview
The available trial studied N-[5-(2H-1,3-BENZODIOXOL-5-YL)-6-{2-[(5-BROMOPYRIMIDIN-2-YL)OXY]ETHOXY}PYRIMIDIN-4-YL]-N’-(2-METHOXYETHYL)SULFURIC DIAMIDE in people with chronic kidney disease and type 1 diabetes.[1] The study aimed to examine whether the treatment could help prevent kidney injury, especially by lowering albumin in the urine.[1]
Who was studied
The trial was planned for adults with type 1 diabetes and chronic kidney disease.[1] It also focused on people with elevated urinary albumin excretion, which means they had more albumin in the urine than expected.[1]
What the study measured
The main result measure was the change from baseline in urine albumin-creatinine ratio (UACR).[1] This is a urine test used to track how much albumin is leaking into the urine over time.[1] The study compared SC0062 alone with a combination of dapagliflozin and SC0062.[1]
Trial phase and status
This was a Phase 2 study, which means it was an early study looking for signs that the treatment might help and continuing to collect research data.[1] The study status was Withdrawn, meaning it was stopped before participants were enrolled.[1] The planned enrollment was 36 participants.[1]
Treatments being compared
The trial compared two study approaches: SC0062 alone and dapagliflozin plus SC0062.[1] The purpose was to see whether adding dapagliflozin changed albuminuria results compared with SC0062 alone.[1]
Patient-friendly terms
Albuminuria means too much albumin, a protein, is passing into the urine.[1] Renal injury means kidney damage.[1] Interventional study means researchers give a treatment and measure what happens.[1]



