Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Abdominal obesity is a major risk factor for heart attack, stroke, peripheral vascular disease, dementia, cancer and Type 2 diabetes. The central hypothesis for this proposal is that pro-atherogenic mediators emanate from inflammation in deep subcutaneous adipose tissue (dSAT) that are released into the systemic circulation and damage the arterial vasculature. The investigators postulate that inflammation of dSAT, when quantified by macrophage phenotyping/enumeration will be a) closely linked with systemic levels of pro-atherogenic mediators and b) tightly associated with endothelial dysfunction and loss of central arterial elasticity, which are highly predictive of future cardiovascular disease (CVD) complications. These relationships provide the basis for macrophage-targeted therapy to reduce obesity-related inflammation and impaired arterial vasoreactivity. The investigators will evaluate a novel approach using a dipeptidyl peptidase 4 inhibitor (DPP4i) sitagliptin, which blocks signal transduction for monocyte/macrophage activation. Thus, in abdominally obese, 18-40 years-old adults without clinical CVD, the show study is expected to show that sitagliptin versus placebo will:

1. significantly improve early measures of arterial damage (brachial artery endothelial dysfunction and reduced carotid elasticity).

2. significantly attenuate inflammation in dSAT and local production of pro-inflammatory mediators in adipose tissue, which will be associated with decreases in systemic pro-atherogenic mediators that contribute to atherogenesis.

Since many obese persons fail to sustain weight loss by lifestyle interventions including diet and exercise, an important public health goal is to identify relatively safe alternative strategies that can be used pre-emptively in "asymptomatic" obese persons when arterial dysfunction and damage is still reversible before atherosclerosis progresses to serious CVD events.


Clinical Trial Description

APPROACH:

Overview of Study Design: This is a double-masked, randomized, placebo-controlled pilot study of treatment sitagliptin (100mg/day) to suppress monocyte/macrophage activation in obese non-diabetic participants. 16 abdominally obese18-40 year-old largely minorities will be randomized 3:1 to receive sitagliptin (N=12) or matching placebo (N=4) daily for 28 days.

Eligibility Criteria for the Study Cohort: Based on prior studies conducted by the investigators, approximately 60-70% of participants enrolled will be Hispanics and African Americans. Both minorities have increased prevalence of insulin resistance (IR) at young ages. In their prior studies, insulin resistance (HOMA-IR* ≥3.0) had a predictive value of 88% for crown like structure in abdominal fat (a surrogate for fat inflammation); the inclusion criterion for IR will assure that most study subjects will have abdominal fat inflammation.

* homeostatic method of analysis-insulin resistance

Inclusion Criteria

1. Age 18-40 years of age

2. Stable weight (no change >3% in prior 6 months)

3. Waist circumference ≥102cm for men; ≥88cm for women

4. Fasting plasma glucose 100-125, HgbA1C 5.7-6.4% or HOMA-IR* ≥3.0

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Regular use of a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID); unwilling to stop NSAID drug

2. On statin or other prescription anti-inflammatory drugs

3. Diabetes or clinically evident cardiovascular disease

4. Smoking daily or consuming >200g alcohol/day

Study participants will be adults 18-40 years of age to exclude older persons with irreversible atherosclerosis (e.g. calcified, stenotic plaque) or subclinical arterial thrombus which release inflammatory mediators. Persons with Type 2 diabetes (a myocardial infarction equivalent) and those receiving "statins" (also potent anti-inflammatory drugs) will be excluded, thereby further excluding participants with advanced atherosclerosis. The goal is to identify and study persons with abdominal obesity and inflammation at a younger age as a potential target population for pre-emptive anti-inflammatory therapy to prevent serious CVD events over ensuing years.

Outcome Measures:

1. Change in arterial vasoreactivity measured and quantified by ultrasound assessment of brachial artery flow mediated dilation and carotid stiffness (elasticity and distensibility).

2. Change in measures of inflammation in intra-abdominal adipose tissue:

1. M1 pro-inflammatory macrophages and M2 anti-inflammatory macrophages by fluorescent activated cell sorting.

2. Ex vivo secretion of inflammatory mediators from macrophages fractions.

3. Change in systemic pro-inflammatory/pro-atherogenic markers and insulin resistance. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02576288
Study type Interventional
Source University of Southern California
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 2
Start date January 2016
Completion date December 31, 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03995979 - Inflammation and Protein Restriction N/A
Completed NCT03255187 - Effect of Dietary Supplemental Fish Oil in Alleviating Health Hazards Associated With Air Pollution N/A
Completed NCT04507867 - Effect of a NSS to Reduce Complications in Patients With Covid-19 and Comorbidities in Stage III N/A
Completed NCT03577223 - Egg Effects on the Immunomodulatory Properties of HDL N/A
Completed NCT04383561 - Relationship Between LRG and Periodontal Disease N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03622632 - Pilot Study to Measure Uric Acid in Traumatized Patients: Determinants and Prognostic Association
Completed NCT06216015 - Exercise Training and Kidney Transplantation N/A
Completed NCT04856748 - Nomogram to Diagnose Prostatic Inflammation (PIN) in Men With Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms
Completed NCT05529693 - Efficacy of a Probiotic Strain on Level of Markers of Inflammation in an Elderly Population N/A
Recruiting NCT05670301 - Flemish Joint Effort for Biomarker pRofiling in Inflammatory Systemic Diseases N/A
Recruiting NCT05415397 - Treating Immuno-metabolic Depression With Anti-inflammatory Drugs Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05775731 - Markers of Inflammation and of the Pro-thrombotic State in Hospital Shift and Day Workers
Recruiting NCT04543877 - WHNRC (Western Human Nutrition Research Center) Fiber Intervention Study Early Phase 1
Completed NCT03859934 - Metabolic Effects of Melatonin Treatment Phase 1
Completed NCT03429920 - Effect of Fermented Soy Based Product on Cardiometabolic Risk Factors N/A
Completed NCT06065241 - Quantifiably Determine if the Botanical Formulation, LLP-01, Has a Significant Clinical Effect on Proteomic Inflammatory Biomarkers and Epigenetic Changes in Healthy, Older Individuals. N/A
Completed NCT05864352 - The Role of Dietary Titanium Dioxide on the Human Gut Microbiome and Health
Completed NCT03318731 - Efficacy and Safety of Fenugreek Extract on Markers of Muscle Damage and Inflammation in Untrained Males N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06134076 - Comparing Effects of Fermented and Unfermented Pulses and Gut Microbiota N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT05910489 - Micro and Nanoplastics in Greenhouse Workers: Biomarkers of Exposure and Effect