Prevention of Heart Failure in Type 2 Diabetes by Exercise Intervention
NCT ID: NCT05023538
Last Updated: 2024-09-25
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
NA
182 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2022-03-01
2026-12-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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To prevent adverse cardiac remodeling in T2DM and the development of DIHF, early biomarkers are mandatory. In this respect, in the past few years global longitudinal strain (GLS) emerged as an important predictive marker that could be assessed during echocardiography: the global longitudinal strain enables the detection of subclinical myocardial systolic dysfunction, without observable reductions in cardiac output or left ventricular ejection fraction, often years before DIHF. In asymptomatic T2DM patients with no history of cardiovascular disease, an impaired GLS is a predictor of future adverse left ventricular (LV) remodeling and adverse cardiovascular events, thus providing incremental prognostic value beyond clinical data, glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and diastolic function. The investigators found that GLS is indeed significantly lowered (by ±14%, at rest and during low-intense and high-intense exercise, in asymptomatic well-controlled T2DM patients (HbA1c: 6.9±0.7%). During exercise, GLS increases in T2DM, but fails to normalize when compared with healthy controls. In contrast to current assumption, the investigators' data demonstrate that a disturbed GLS is highly common in T2DM patients.
Exercise training is strongly recommended to T2DM patients, and is a crucial treatment next to medication and diet, as this (further) optimizes glycemic control by improving insulin sensitivity, next to the positive impact on physical fitness, blood pressure, lipid profile and body composition. Recent evidence also indicates a significantly lowered mortality in habitual physically active vs. non-active T2DM patients (hazard ratio=0.61).
What type of exercise is most effective? What remains debatable is whether exercise intervention can prevent the development of DIHF in asymptomatic T2DM patients. According to a recent systematic review from the investigators' laboratory, the impact of exercise intervention on GLS in asymptomatic T2DM is equivocal: significant improvements from some studies could not be reproduced in other. In line with these findings, the investigators' unpublished pilot data also reveal the capability of exercise training to improve GLS in some T2DM patients.
The investigators' data show the potency of exercise in preventing DIHF in asymptomatic T2DM patients, but they also show that crucial aspects deserve further study to maximize the benefits of exercise training on GLS in T2DM patients, and hereby to offer maximal protection against the development of DIHF.
The impact of different exercise modalities (e.g. intensity, volume) on GLS in T2DM patients is currently unknown. In the only clinical study that examined T2MD patients to date, results show that high-intense interval training is more effective to improve GLS, as opposed to moderate-intense exercise training. However, the study is biased due to the lack of supervision in the moderate-intense trained group and the lack of control for equal caloric expenditure between training groups. Therefore, it is likely that differences in exercise volume could be at the basis of different changes in GLS between groups. Indeed, the investigators' pilot data, in which iso-caloric interventions were compared, show different results: moderate-intense exercise training seems more potent to improve GLS, as opposed to high-intense interval training. As a result, although there is evidence that exercise training improves GLS in T2DM patients, it remains to be studied whether different volumes or intensities are of key importance.
Despite following identical exercise interventions, studies and the investigators' pilot data also show significant inter-subject variances in changes in GLS. Therefore, the impact of the patient's phenotype, as well as habitual physical activity (PA) and dietary habits, on the effects of exercise training on GLS in T2DM patients is currently unknown. Revealing which (non-)modifiable patient-related factors (e.g. phenotype, habitual PA and dietary habits) predict the responsiveness of GLS to exercise intervention in T2DM patients may lead to a more patient-specific application of such intervention or further tailoring of the intervention.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Usual care
No intervention
No interventions assigned to this group
Low-volume moderately-intense exercise
exercise at 50-65%VO2peak; 20-30min/training session, 3x/week, 6 months
Cycling
Exercise on bicycle ergometer
High-volume moderately-intense exercise
exercise at 50-65%VO2peak; 20-50min/training session, 3x/week, 6 months
Cycling
Exercise on bicycle ergometer
Low-volume high-intense exercise
exercise at 50-85%VO2peak; 20-30min/training session, 3x/week, 6 months
Cycling
Exercise on bicycle ergometer
Interventions
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Cycling
Exercise on bicycle ergometer
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* age between 30-75 years
* blood HbA1c of 6-10% (if taking blood glucose lowering medication) or 6.5-10% without taking blood glucose lowering medication, and/or two-hour plasma glucose ≥11.1 mmol/L or ≥200 mg/dL following a 75g oral glucose load during OGTT.
* women of child bearing age will be included into the trial.
Exclusion Criteria
* individuals suffering from any disease with significant impact on exercise intervention participation, such as: chronic heart disease or significant arrhythmias, cardiac events (myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass graft, percutaneous coronary intervention), chronic obstructive pulmonary, cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular disease, severe hypertension (\>160/110 mmHg), cancer, severe neuropathy (limiting exercise participation).
30 Years
75 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Jessa Hospital
OTHER
KU Leuven
OTHER
University Ghent
OTHER
Hasselt University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Dominique Hansen
Professor
Locations
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Faculty of Rehabilitation Sciences and Physiotherapy, Hasselt University
Hasselt, Belgium, Belgium
Faculty of Movement and Rehabilitation Sciences
Leuven, Belgium, Belgium
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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Version 1, 10/06/2021
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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