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

NCT ID: NCT06423599

Last Updated: 2024-05-24

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE2/PHASE3

Total Enrollment

100 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-05-17

Study Completion Date

2026-12-30

Brief Summary

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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.

Detailed Description

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Background: The prevalence of overweight and obesity has reached pandemic proportions. Obesity is known to increase the risk for Type 2 diabetes and hypertension, as well as the risk for overt cardiovascular (CV) disease, including myocardial infarction, heart failure, and stroke. The rising prevalence of obesity may counteract the recent advances in primary and secondary prevention of CV disease. Overweight and obesity are common in patients with CV disease; however, cardiologists face several challenges in managing body weight in this population. Many may not consider obesity as a therapeutic target probably because there were no previous highly effective and safe pharmacologic interventions to consider. In addition, they may not have the expertise or resources to implement lifestyle interventions and may have limited familiarity with obesity pharmacotherapy. Moreover, the long-term CV effects of obesity pharmacotherapy remain uncertain due to limited CV outcome data with weight loss as the primary intervention. Although current CV guidelines recognize the importance of weight loss, they primarily focus on lifestyle modifications, with fewer details on strategies to utilize obesity pharmacotherapy and surgery. However, the recent 2022 American Diabetes Association/European Association for the Study of Diabetes consensus on the management of Type 2 diabetes has moved up weight management to the front of the treatment algorithm, by prioritizing the use of pharmacologic interventions such as glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide/glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, which have potent weight-lowering effects, in addition to glucose-lowering effects.

Hypothesis: The investigators hypothesise that weight loss treatment with semaglutide is superior to weight loss with state-of-the-art calorie-restricted diet in improving the peak oxygen uptake (ml/min/kg) after 52 weeks as a marker of physical performance (and with prognostic implications) in patients with obesity and heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.

Design: This is a investigator-initiated, parallel-group, 2-arm assessor-blinded, open-label, randomised, controlled trial (RCT) comparing the effect of weight loss using low-calorie replacement diet to weight loss using semaglutide in obese patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. Subjects will be randomised in a 1:1 ratio to receive either low-calorie replacement diet or semaglutide.The subjects wil be followed for 52 weeks during the intervention period. The patients will be examined at 16 weeks (where the weight loss is anticipated to be approximately equal in the two groups) and after 52 weeks.

Primary, secondary and exploratory objectives are listed below. The exploratory objectives are mostly embedded mechanistic studies of an exploratory nature and therefore hypothesis-generating in the RCT.

Intervention: Subjects will be treated with semaglutide once weekly or a weight loss intervention consisting of a calorie-restricted diet and dietary advice on top of standard of care, which covers management of heart failure medication, CV risk factors and healthy lifestyle counselling.

Conditions

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Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction Obesity Weight Loss Chronic Heart Failure

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

This is a investigator-initiated, parallel-group, 2-arm assessor-blinded, open-label, randomised, clinical trial
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Outcome Assessors
Anonymized data will be analyzed

Study Groups

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Semaglutide intervention group

Dose-escalation of semaglutide will take place during the first 16 weeks after randomisation (week 0). Patients will start at the 0.25 mg once-weekly dose and follow dose-escalation schedule (0.25, 0.5, 1.0, 1.7 and 2.4 mg). For all subjects we aim at reaching the recommended target dose of 2.4 mg semaglutide once weekly for the rest of the period of total 52 weeks.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Semaglutide Injectable Product

Intervention Type DRUG

Weight loss using Semaglutide

Calorie-restricted diet intervention group

In short, the weight loss program in the calorie-restricted diet group consists of 3 phases after randomisation (week 0). An initial weight loss phase of 8 weeks with 800 calories/day, a food re-introduction phase for 8 weeks and a weight loss maintenance phase for the rest of the period of total 52 weeks.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Calorie-restricted diet

Intervention Type DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

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

Interventions

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Semaglutide Injectable Product

Weight loss using Semaglutide

Intervention Type DRUG

Calorie-restricted diet

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

Intervention Type DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Male or female, age ≥ 18 years at the time of signing informed consent
* Body mass index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m2
* Heart failure with New York Heart Association (NYHA)-class 1-3 and reduced ejection fraction (EF≤40%) established by either:

1. echocardiography AND/OR
2. cardiac magnetic resonance
* On stable optimal medical heart failure therapy for at least 4 weeks

Exclusion Criteria

1. Cardiovascular-related:

* Any of the following: myocardial infarction, stroke, hospitalisation for unstable angina pectoris or transient ischaemic attack within the past 6 months prior to the day of screening
* Planned coronary, carotid or peripheral artery revascularisation known on the day of screening
* Transient heart failure related to reversible mechanisms like tachycardia, sepsis, etc.
2. Glycaemia-related:

* Type 1 diabetes
* Treatment with any Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) agonists within 90 days prior to the day of screening
* Type 2 diabetes requiring other pharmacotherapy than metformin and Sodium-glucose Cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) Inhibitors
3. General safety:

* Pregnancy or planned pregnancy
* History or presence of chronic pancreatitis
* Presence of acute pancreatitis within the past 180 days prior to the day of screening
* Kidney disease with eGFR \< 35ml/min
* Presence or history of malignant neoplasms within the past 5 years prior to the day of screening (Basal and squamous cell skin cancer and any carcinoma in-situ are allowed)
* Known or suspected hypersensitivity to trial product(s) or related products
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Jens D Hove, MD,PHD

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Jens D Hove, MD,PHD

Chief Physician, Research associate Professor, MD, PhD

Responsibility Role SPONSOR_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Jens D Hove

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Amager-Hvidovre Universitetshospital

Locations

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Amager and Hvidovre Hospital University of Copenhagen

Copenhagen, , Denmark

Site Status RECRUITING

Countries

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Denmark

Central Contacts

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Jens D Hove, MD, PhD

Role: CONTACT

+4538623218

Mohammed El-Sheikh, MD

Role: CONTACT

+4552309685

Facility Contacts

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Jens D Hove, MD, PhD

Role: primary

+4538623218

Mohammed El-Sheikh, MD

Role: backup

+4552309685

Other Identifiers

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2023-503753-35-01

Identifier Type: CTIS

Identifier Source: secondary_id

U1111-1298-6418

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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