View clinical trials related to Obesity.
Filter by:An observational, multicenter, national study with retrospective real-life data collection on the combined treatment of sibutramine and topiramate (off-label use) for the treatment of overweight with comorbidity(ies) or obesity. Data from all adult patients, of both sexes, for whom combination treatment with sibutramine and topiramate, both at any dose/dosage, were prescribed between the year 2011 and the beginning of the study will be included in the study.
A phase 3, multicenter, randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, parallel-group, active-drug- and placebo-controlled clinical trial to assess the safety, efficacy and superiority of the new fixed-dose combination sibutramine IR/topyramat XR in weight reduction in overweight adults with comorbidity(ies) or obesity
This study is open to adults with obesity. People with a body mass index (BMI) in the range from 30 to 40 kg/m2 and a body weight of 70 to 150 kg can participate in the study. The purpose of this study is to find out whether treatment with a medicine called BI 456906 changes the occupancy of receptors in the liver and in the pancreas. These receptors are involved in appetite and weight regulation. To measure the occupancy of these receptors, doctors use injectable tracers. Doctors visualise the binding of the tracers to these receptors with imaging methods. Participants are put into 4 groups randomly, which means by chance. 2 groups get BI 456906 and 2 groups get semaglutide. Semaglutide is an approved medicine for body weight reduction. For 17 weeks, participants get injections under the skin. They either get BI 456906 twice a week or semaglutide once a week. The injected doses increase in small steps. Before and after 17 weeks of treatment, the receptor occupancy is determined. Participants are in the study for up to 6 months. At the beginning and at the end of the treatment participants stay at the study site with an overnight stay. At the beginning, the study staff trains participants how to inject the study treatment at home. Participants who get BI 456906 visit the study site 18 times and have 19 visits at home. Participants who get semaglutide visit the study site 15 times and have 6 home visits. The doctors also regularly check participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects.
This is a digital health study in which participants are recruited to collect sleep and activity data from digital activity trackers. We are also collecting survey/questionnaire data on baseline health and sleep characteristics as well as bi-weekly assessments of sleep quality and mood. Overall, we aim to examine how sleep relates to physical and mental health in a large population of activity tracker users.
This clinical study will investigate Jejunal Microbiota in Metabolic Diseases (Je-MiMe, n=45) and Colonic mucosa-associated Microbiota in Metabolic Diseases (Col-MiMe, n=45). Each cohort (Je and Col -MiMe) is composed of three groups: participants with obesity (n=15) with obesity and with type II diabetes (n=15). This research protocol is organized in two parts. Each part of this study will recruit 45 participants that are only recruited in one of the parts of the protocol (JE-MIME or COL-MIME). Thus, in total, the study will include 90 patients. Each part of this study is composed of 3 groups: 1) "Control Group ", 2) Obese group (Ob), 3) Obese and Type 2 Diabetes group (ObD). Control groups for part I (JE-MIME) and part 2 (COL-MIME) are composed of different participants. Each group is composed of 15 human adult volunteers for the JE-MIME study (part 1) and 15 participants for the COL-MIME study (part 2). Total number of participants is 45 for part 1, and 45 for part 2. Total number for this project is 90. Microbiota wil be collected during an endoscopy or coloscopy which is planned as routine care for the patients. Primary objectives are to characterize jejunal (JE-MIME, Part I of the study) and colonic mucosa-associated microbiota (COLMIME, Part II of the study) and compare both microbiota to faecal microbiota (evaluate differences and similarities between jejunal microbiota or mucus-associated microbiota and faecal microbiota). Secondary objectives are to 1) Correlate microbiota with metabolic health and inflammatory markers; 2) Correlate microbiota with lifestyle and neuropsychological health. Both the jejunal microbiota and mucus-associated microbiota are strong integrators of nutritional environment and intestinal health status, respectively, compared to the fecal microbiota. This study will help to better understand the physiopathology of metabolic diseases. This research could lead to finding specific microbiota members, either from the jejunal compartment or from the inner mucus layer, crucial for the promotion / protection of chronic intestinal inflammation and associated metabolic health.
XW004 is an acylated human glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) analogue and is being developed for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and obesity management.
Over the last 40 years, obesity has increased dramatically among all age groups, especially in infants and young children, and became an important global public health challenge, thus early prevention is the highest priority. Emerging studies have found that infant sleep intervention is very likely to become one of the most important strategies for early obesity prevention. However, its action path is not clear, making the target of sleep intervention relatively vague. The role of circadian rhythm in human health status has received increasing attention in recent years. Both animal experiment-based studies and adult clinic-based studies have found significant effect of the circadian rhythm on obesity and other metabolic disorders. Therefore, the present research will establish a community-based 1:1 parallel multi-center randomized controlled trial of sleep intervention cohort in communities with highly rapid weight gain at the early infancy stage. Investigators will collect daily rhythm data, including sleep-wake rhythm, rest-activity rhythm, light-dark cycle, and feeding-fasting, as well as the real-world golden standard of circadian rhythm assessed by seven times saliva melatonin, to test the impact of the sleep intervention program, to determine the causal mechanism of circadian rhythm in the occurrence and development of obesity and metabolic disorder early in life. Our study will provide a new theoretical basis for the establishment of the stable circadian rhythm for the prevention of infant obesity, which has important public health significance.
The investigators will be recruiting patients in the primary care setting to enroll a weight loss program where they will be seen every 2 weeks for 3 months, and then every month for 3 months, and the investigators will implement specific interventions tailored to the patients' needs.
Obesity could be avoided but once declared it become a chronic disease with numerous health complications, including cardiovascular and metabolic diseases, cancers, and finally a loss of life expectancy. Considering that after the age of 6 years old, half of the obese children will become obese adults, the WHO has been declared childhood obesity prevention as a health priority area. Large-scale prevention of obesity is challenging and it would be more efficient to proceed to early identification of high risks children to implement personalized prevention. The ELIPSE study main objective is to evaluate the efficacy of personalized multidisciplinary care to reduce the BMI of overweight or obese children. A 2 years educational program will be evaluated at short and longer terms (after a 12 months follow-up), and its benefits will also be assessed based on comparison with a historical control group. Along with efficacy evaluation, scientific objectives were designed to investigate clinical, genetic, social, and behavioural risk factors and to analyse potential correlations between these factors and a predisposition to overweight or obesity. Moreover, advanced analyses will be performed to decipher the impact of diverse risk profiles on the efficacy of the educational program. The motive of the ELIPSE study is to promote the health and well-being of children and their families to tackle the health burden represented by childhood overweight and obesity. Combined with innovative scientific objectives, this study ambitions to develop more efficient and more personalized preventive care methods.
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