RecruitingPhase 2Phase 3NCT06423599

Effect of Weight Loss on Physical and Cardiac Performance in People With Obesity and Heart Failure


Sponsor

Jens D Hove, MD,PHD

Enrollment

100 participants

Start Date

May 17, 2024

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Conditions

Summary

The benefit of weight loss in patients with obesity and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) is controversial. Semaglutide has shown cardiovascular (CV) risk-reduction and impact on CV risk factors including overweight, dysglycaemia and hypertension in subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2D). The STEP-HFpEF (Semaglutide Treatment Effect in People With Obesity and HFpEF) recently demonstrated, at 1-year, to not only reduce weight considerably, but also significantly improve health-related quality of life, functional status scores and 6-min walk distance in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Also, the recently concluded SELECT trial was the first CV outcome trial with semaglutide in patients with overweight or obesity and established CV disease, including heart failure (but no T2D). Semaglutide demonstrated a 20% reduction in MACE, defined as the composite of cardiovascular death, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and non-fatal stroke. These landmark findings have important implications for clinicians -as they mean that weight loss and/or semaglutide as anti-obesity pharmacotherapy could be a treatment strategy for secondary prevention of CV disease in patients with overweight or obesity. It is, however, unknown whether weight loss with either calorie-restricted diet or semaglutide has beneficial effects in obese subjects with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction. Also it is unclear whether semaglutide has cardiovascular benefits irrespective of starting weight and amount of weight loss. Purpose: The study aims to investigate whether weight loss treatment with semaglutide is superior to weight loss with calorie-restricted diet in improving peak oxygen uptake in patients with obesity and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.


Eligibility

Min Age: 18 Years

Plain Language Summary

Simplified for easier understanding

This study is looking at whether weight loss (using a GLP-1 medication) improves physical fitness and heart function in people who are obese and have heart failure with reduced pumping ability. Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction means the heart is not pumping as strongly as it should. **You may be eligible if...** - You are 18 years or older - You have a BMI of 30 or above (classified as obese) - You have heart failure with reduced pumping strength (ejection fraction ≤ 40%), confirmed by echo or MRI - Your heart failure treatment has been stable for at least 4 weeks **You may NOT be eligible if...** - You had a heart attack, stroke, or hospitalization for chest pain in the past 6 months - You have Type 1 diabetes - You have used a GLP-1 medication (like semaglutide or liraglutide) in the last 90 days - You have Type 2 diabetes requiring treatments other than metformin or SGLT2 inhibitors - You are pregnant or planning to become pregnant - You have kidney disease with a significantly reduced filtration rate - You have had cancer in the last 5 years Talk to your doctor to see if this trial is right for you.

This summary was AI-generated to explain the trial in plain language. It is not medical advice. Always discuss eligibility with your doctor before enrolling in a clinical trial.

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Interventions

DRUGSemaglutide Injectable Product

Weight loss using Semaglutide

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTCalorie-restricted diet

Weight loss by calorie-restricted diet program followed by a weight loss maintenance follow-up program


Locations(1)

Amager and Hvidovre Hospital University of Copenhagen

Copenhagen, Denmark

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NCT06423599


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