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Browse 4,967 clinical trials for obesity. Find studies that match your criteria and connect with research centers.
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NCT06484114
Fractyl is evaluating Revita Duodenal Mucosal Resurfacing (DMR) in the REMAIN-1 pivotal study, which is designed to include two cohorts - an open label cohort referred to as REVEAL-1, and a randomized cohort, which includes both a midpoint analysis and a pivotal analysis. Patients who previously lost at least 15% of their body weight on a GLP-1 can qualify for the open label REVEAL-1 cohort. The data generated from the REVEAL-1 cohort will be used for open label reporting as the study progresses. The REMAIN-1 randomized cohort will enroll patients living with obesity and a body mass index ("BMI") between 30 and 45 kg/m2 who are not currently on a GLP-1 drug. Patients will be prescribed tirzepatide and titrated to achieve at least 15% total body weight loss, at which time tirzepatide will be discontinued and patients will be randomized to Revita versus sham at 2:1. Midpoint Analysis of Randomized Cohort: The midpoint analysis of the randomized cohort will be performed at three months of follow-up on approximately 45 patients, allowing us to assess and report on safety and efficacy signals that could be anticipated in the pivotal analysis. These patients are distinct from those included in the pivotal analysis. Pivotal Analysis of Randomized Cohort: The pivotal analysis of the randomized cohort will be performed on approximately 315 patients (distinct from those included in the midpoint analysis) and will evaluate safety and efficacy in the first co-primary endpoint, which is weight regain from the time of tirzepatide discontinuation in Revita DMR versus sham patients at six months, with a primary objective of demonstrating a benefit of Revita DMR versus sham for weight maintenance after GLP-1 discontinuation. The second co-primary endpoint evaluates a responder rate among the Revita DMR treated group at one year to demonstrate the durability of the Revita DMR procedure for weight maintenance after discontinuation of a GLP-1-based therapy. Secondary objectives will include evaluation of the effectiveness of the Revita DMR procedure on the change in blood glucose levels, cardiovascular disease ("CVD") risk factors, body composition and pre-diabetes status. All patients enrolled in the study will receive diet and lifestyle counseling.
NCT03868592
It is not known how much improvement in insulin regulated lipolysis (the breakdown of triglycerides) occurs following substantial, sustained weight loss. Researchers will test the effects of inflammation and lipolysis regulation in people before and after bariatric surgery (sleeve gastrectomy) to answer these questions.
NCT07032571
The goal of the Reset trial is to learn about the optimal combination of dietary behavior strategies in a fully digital weight loss intervention. The intervention is designed for adults with overweight or obesity. The investigators will examine the impact on weight loss of four dietary strategies: 1) limiting Red Zone Foods (i.e., foods that are high in calories and low in nutrition), 2) limiting eating windows, 3) increasing protein intake, and 4) increasing fiber intake. Each of these strategies will include goal setting, daily self-monitoring, and tailored feedback. The investigators will recruit 208 participants. Broadly, adults with overweight or obesity who live in the U.S. will be eligible. The weight loss intervention will last 12 weeks. All participants will be asked to track their body weight daily and complete weekly behavioral lessons and action plans to promote healthy eating and physical activity. All study tasks will occur remotely. Assessment of body weight and survey measures will occur at the beginning of the trial ("baseline"), and at 1 month and 3 months. The Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST) framework will be used to identify which combination of the dietary behavior strategies results in the greatest weight loss. In total, there will be 16 treatment conditions.
NCT06556277
The investigator aim to understand whether food-induced glucocorticoids influence fat mass in overweight and obese people. In a randomized, cross-over study, 23 overweight and obese volunteers will receive a block and replace therapy that mimics physiological glucocorticoid (GC) rhythm (metyrapone plus hydrocortisone) or placebo. Participants will undergo two identical overfeeding periods with each treatment. With the block and replace therapy food-induced GC peak will be suppressed. Metabolic and immunological parameters will be compared to reveal the effects of GCs during excessive overfeeding, particularly to understand changes in body fat.
NCT07423780
This study will examine within-subject (pre-post) changes in muscle quality, body composition, and functional response following a concurrent exercise program (aerobic + resistance training) in individuals after bariatric surgery. This is a single-center, prospective, longitudinal, quasi-experimental study with a one-group pre-post design. Men and women aged 18 to 60 years who have undergone sleeve gastrectomy or gastric bypass at BUPA Clinic Santiago, are PAD voucher beneficiaries, and have a medical indication for metabolic rehabilitation will be included. Participants will enter the study from postoperative week 4, when the baseline assessment will be performed and the program will begin. The intervention will consist of a 5-week supervised program delivered as two in-person sessions per week (10 sessions in total), each lasting approximately 60 minutes; additionally, participants will be prescribed one autonomous home-based session per week guided by an exercise plan provided by the responsible professional (as a complementary recommendation, not systematically recorded for adherence calculation). After the program, a 1-week period without supervised sessions will be observed, and the final assessment will be performed during the following week. Therefore, outcomes will be measured at two time points: baseline (pre-intervention) and 7 weeks after baseline (after 5 weeks of exercise and 1 week of rest). Adherence will be assessed exclusively as the attendance rate to the 10 supervised in-clinic sessions during the 5-week intervention period, calculated as: adherence (%) = (attended supervised sessions / 10) × 100; for descriptive purposes, adherence will be categorized as high (≥80%), moderate (60-79%), or low (\<60%). Exploratory analyses will examine the association between adherence (%) and the magnitude of pre-post changes in primary outcomes using multivariable linear regression models, adjusting for weight change during the intervention period (Δweight = post-intervention weight - baseline weight). Muscle quality will be assessed using musculoskeletal ultrasound of the rectus femoris (Philips Lumify) with ImageJ image analysis, including thickness measures and parameters related to fat infiltration/echo intensity and area according to a standardized protocol. Body composition will be assessed by bioelectrical impedance analysis (InBody S10). Functional response will be measured using the One-minute Sit-to-Stand Test (1min-STST), with vital signs and perceived exertion (modified Borg scale) recorded as appropriate. Quality of life will be assessed as a secondary outcome using the Moorehead-Ardelt II questionnaire. The expected results will provide clinically relevant evidence on within-subject changes and on the association between adherence to a concurrent exercise program and muscle-related outcomes, supporting optimization of postoperative metabolic rehabilitation after bariatric surgery.
NCT07340580
A public health priority exists for the U.S. healthcare sector to integrate physical activity (PA) as a part of the patient care model. This research will provide valuable information on facilitating optimal implementation of a clinic-to-community model that identifies, refers, and enrolls physically inactive patients to community-based PA programs for the prevention and treatment of chronic diseases. Further, this work will provide evidence on the cost-effectiveness of integrating PA in healthcare systems as a population health management strategy.
NCT06851858
This Phase II study is a randomized, parallel group, double blinded, placebo-controlled, multicenter to evaluate the efficacy, safety, and tolerability of AZD6234 in adults with overweight or obesity and type 2 diabetes on stable GLP-1 RA therapy.
NCT05711758
Gastric myotomy has been performed for several years as a means of addressing chronic stenosis after sleeve gastrectomy and treating gastroparesis. The Pylorus Sparing Antral Myotomy (PSAM) technique has the opposite effect by leaving the pylorus intact and extending the myotomy proximally to the distal gastric body. PSAM was initially combined with ESG and shown to delay gastric emptying and provide greater weight loss without impacting tolerability (GCSI score) or the safety profile of the procedure (2 DDW GEM abstracts). PSAM has not been evaluated alone, without concomitant ESG. Since delayed gastric emptying alone is known to promote weight loss, it is thought that PSAM alone (without ESG) may provide similar efficacy, while reducing procedure time and adverse events. There have been no clinical studies that investigate the efficacy of PSAM independent of ESG. This pilot study aims to address this lack of information by evaluating the safety, tolerability, and short-term efficacy of PSAM, in addition to exploring its impact on gastric physiology. This will also provide data that may be used in designing a larger clinical trial.
NCT06945419
The main purpose of this study is to evaluate the safety, tolerability of LY4086940 and how it is processed in the body. Participation in Part A of the study will last about 10 weeks and may include up to 6 visits. Participation in Parts B, C, D will last approximately 15 weeks and may include up to 9 visits. Participation in Part E will last approximately 7 weeks and may include up to 12 visits.
NCT07001553
An observational study of those who have been prescribed a GLP-1 agonist therapy (yet to commence), for either weight or diabetes management, and are willing to complete dietary records and questionnaires of behaviour and psychosocial health.
NCT06134986
The majority of adults with type 1 diabetes (T1DM) have either overweight or obesity. As such, dietary management has been recommended as an adjunct to insulin treatment to improve glycemic control and facilitate weight loss in patients with T1DM. Daily calorie restriction (CR) is the main diet prescribed to patients with T1DM for weight loss. However, many patients find it difficult to adhere to CR because calorie intake must be vigilantly monitored every day. In light of these problems with CR, another approach that limits timing of food intake, instead of number of calories consumed, has been developed. This diet is called "time restricted eating" (TRE) and involves confining the period of food intake to 6-8 h per day. TRE allows individuals to self-select foods and eat ad libitum during a large part of the day, which greatly increases compliance to these protocols. The simplicity of TRE, its accommodation of dietary preferences, and associated weight loss may translate to improved glycemic measures in patients with T1DM. The present study will be the first randomized controlled trial to compare the effect of TRE versus CR for weight management and improved glycemic control in adults with obesity and T1DM.
NCT07443956
This is a trial to find out how weight loss (achieved by the use of tirzepatide) or ixekizumab treatment affects the characteristics of skin, joint and fat tissues in patients with Psoriatic Arthritis, Psoriasis and obesity/overweight BMI \>=27. Participants will be allocated either Tirzepatide, Ixekizumab or both. Samples of joint tissue, fat and skin will be taken at the start of the study and week 12. Blood and urine samples will also be taken. The primary objective will be to assess the changes seen in the joint, fat and skin tissue samples 12 weeks after starting the medications (additional analysis will be done on the optional 36 week samples). Secondary objectives will be * To assess the changes seen in blood 4, 12, 36 and 52 weeks after starting the medication. * To compare the changes seen in tissue and blood between Ixekizumab and Tirzepatide/Weight loss. * To see how the changes seen in the tissue relate to weight loss.
NCT07444073
This study examines whether routine treatment with semaglutide or tirzepatide, prescribed with lifestyle coaching in a real-world weight-management program, is associated with changes in biological age measured by the LinAge2 clinical aging clock over 6 months.
NCT06814938
This study is being done to assess the efficacy of a saliva- based biomarker to predict response to semaglutide for the treatment of obesity.
NCT07443059
This study is a single-dose, open-label, parallel design phase I clinical study to evaluate the PK characteristics and safety of single subcutaneous injection of ZT002 Injection in participants with different degrees of renal insufficiency and matched participants with normal renal function.
NCT07355933
This interventional study explores the relationship between improvements in metabolic health following weight loss and changes in whole-body fat mass and its distribution. The study focuses on adult men and women with excess body weight undergoing dietary energy restriction over 12 weeks. The primary research question is: Does a greater reduction in fat mass for a given weight loss correlate with more significant improvements in metabolic health?
NCT07437079
This study is testing a new medicine, NNC6989-0001, to test it is safe and tolerable for healthy people living with overweight or obesity. NNC6989-0001 is still being tested in studies and is not yet available for prescription by doctors. In this study, participants will receive either NNC6989-0001 or a placebo; which treatment each participant receives will be decided by chance.
NCT06057597
Obesity with its consequences such as type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, dyslipidemia, fatty liver disease, sleep apnea and cancers, remains a major healthcare problem worldwide. Bariatric surgery, combined with nutritional education and close monitoring, has been shown to be the most effective treatment for patients with morbid obesity resulting in significant and lasting weight loss and improvements in co-morbidities . With nearly 50000 procedures per year France ranks third in the world in terms of care for patients suffering from morbid (BMI ≥ 40 kg/m²) and severe (BMI 35-40 kg/m²) obesity. In parallel with the significant increase in the number of patients operated on for obesity in the world, over the past two decades, significant development has been observed in the field of bariatric surgery with a decrease or even disappearance of some procedures and the appearance of others. Performed for more than 40 years, the Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass (RYGB) is a restrictive and malabsorptive procedure and currently is considered as gold standard procedure for the treatment of morbid obesity and its comorbidities. However, despite the good effectiveness (with an average Excess Weight Loss % (EWL%) of approximatively 70% at 2 years), RYGB is technically demanding procedure with learning curve requiring more than 100 cases and an overall complication rate ranging from 10% to 20% Introduced in 2001, one anastomosis gastric bypass (OAGB) is a modified gastric bypass that consists of a single gastrojejunal anastomosis between a long gastric pouch and a jejunal (biliopancreatic) omega loop. In Sept. 2019, taking into account the results from YOMEGA trial, the French High Authority for Health (Haute Autorité de Santé (HAS)) recommended to ban OAGB with 200 cm or longer BPL and urged to assess the efficacy and safety of OAGB with 150 cm BPL in a randomized controlled trial. Indeed, YOMEGA-2 trial is logical continuity of the YOMEGA trial. The aim of this study is to assess weight loss efficiency and the nutritional safety of the OAGB-150 in comparison to a standard (RYGB). The hypothesis of this study is that the OAGB with a 150 cm BPL could have the same efficacy on weight loss and nutritional complication rate in comparison to the RYGB at 2 years.
NCT04019197
This is a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial designed to assess the effect of the GLP-1 receptor agonist, semaglutide, on visceral and ectopic fat, insulin resistance, inflammation markers, and the downstream effect of cardiovascular risk in people with HIV. The primary endpoints will be visceral and ectopic fat changes over the study period. The secondary endpoints will include changes in markers of inflammation, immune activation, gut integrity, and cardiovascular disease risk assessment.
NCT04793334
Obesity is a common risk factor for the development of obstructive sleep apnea. However, not all subjects with obesity develop obstructive sleep apnea. This study will attempt to determine the mechanistic drivers between obesity and obstructive sleep apnea.