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Weight Loss clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05912699 Not yet recruiting - Stress Clinical Trials

A Study to Evaluate the Effect of SlimBiotics L. Fermentum K8 Postbiotic on Weight Management and Metabolic Health Outcomes

Start date: July 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is to evaluate the efficacy of a postbiotic supplement on weight management and metabolic health. This study will be conducted as a hybrid trial consisting of both in-person visits and virtual assessments. Two groups will be included: the intervention (SlimBiotics postbiotic) and placebo. The SlimBiotics postbiotic formula is the first plant-based postbiotic targeting weight management and metabolic health. Other competing postbiotics are isolated from humans (feces) but the strains in SlimBiotics were isolated from a fermented plant (millet porridge cereal) This product contains L. fermentum K8 Postbiotic.

NCT ID: NCT05903157 Completed - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

ME-WEL: eHealth Behaviour Change Intervention for Weight Management in Post-menopausal Women

ME-WEL
Start date: March 28, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

In post-menopause, most women gain weight, and obesity rates are more prevalent in this particular group. In addition, there is an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and diabetes. Given that this weight gain can be related to risk behaviours, healthy weight management (such as an increase in physical activity or healthy eating) is crucial to promote a healthy weight and well-being. The ME-WEL (MEnopause and WEigth Loss) project (ref. SFRH/BD/144525/2019), entails an eHealth intervention for weight management and well-being in post-menopausal women with overweight or obesity, based on two theoretical models of behavioral change - the Health Action Process Approach (HAPA), and the Health Belief Model (HBM), and applying the Behaviour Change Techniques Taxonomy (BCTT). This group's eHealth intervention lasts 8 weeks. Each week there is a different theme to be addressed, taking into account the behavioral change models mechanisms, in articulation with different BCT´s. Subjective well-being, self-esteem, weight loss, implementation of weight management strategies, and changes in eating behavior and physical activity/exercise were evaluated, through follow-ups at 3- and 6- post-intervention.

NCT ID: NCT05901675 Active, not recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

EMPOWER: Effects of Weight Loss and Exercise Post-stroke

EMP
Start date: July 7, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The prevalence of obesity among U.S. adults is ~40% and is projected to climb. It is well documented that obesity is associated with increased levels of disability as well as risk for numerous adverse health-related outcomes; including occurrence of stroke and all-cause mortality. Obesity is highly prevalent in stroke survivors (~30-45% of stroke survivors have BMI>30) and is associated with reductions in physical function and increased disability. Furthermore, neurological sequelae following stroke result in a myriad of residual impairments that contribute to significant reductions in physical activity, which further increase the risk for obesity. The alarmingly high (and increasing) rates of obesity amongst stroke survivors represents an area of critical clinical need and, despite an abundance of information regarding weight loss approaches in neurologically healthy individuals, there is a lack of information regarding the impact of intentional weight loss on overweight and obese survivors of stroke. Thus, the purpose of this study it investigate the effect of varying weight loss approaches on physical function and psychosocial outcomes in chronic stroke survivors.

NCT ID: NCT05892003 Recruiting - Appetitive Behavior Clinical Trials

Scot Sweet Study (Interaction of a Non-nutritive Sweetener With a High-fibre Weight Loss Diet)

SSS
Start date: May 12, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators present a weight loss diet intervention study, to be conducted as a within-subject design, with all food and beverages provided, to assess interaction of non-nutritive sweetener (sucralose) with a high-fibre weight loss diet, on markers of gut health in humans. This study will allow assessment of the effects of a non-nutritive sweetener (sucralose) with a high-fibre (soluble fibre, fructo-oligosaccharides, FOS) diet on metabolic health and activity and composition of gut microbiota, by a controlled human diet intervention study. The investigators propose to recruit participants living with obesity, with a poor diet quality (moderate habitual fibre intake) to additionally address diet inequalities in the research approach, and this will also allow examine the time-course of adaptation of the gut microbiome (measured in faecal samples). The investigators will also assess changes in free-living glycaemic control with addition of dietary fibre and bio-markers of health.

NCT ID: NCT05890209 Active, not recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Optimizing Weight Loss. Can Continuous Glucose Monitoring Play a Role

OWL-CGM
Start date: April 15, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to determine the potential effectiveness of adding Continuous Glucose Monitoring to a personalized weight loss maintenance program in improving weight loss maintenance. The main questions it aims to answer are: - What is the feasibility and acceptability of wearing a continuous glucose monitoring device in people maintaining weight loss? - Is using continuous glucose monitoring will help to change the food and physical activity behavior in people maintaining weight loss? Participants will be randomized into control and intervention groups where the researchers will compare the effects of wearing continuous glucose monitoring devices on behavior change in both groups.

NCT ID: NCT05885074 Not yet recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Mechanistic Insights to Weight Loss Maintenance Through SGLT2 Inhibitors

Start date: January 30, 2025
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Obesity increases the risk of cardiometabolic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes. Weight loss interventions such as low-calorie diet and physical activity are effective for weight loss in the short term, but weight loss maintenance (WLM) with low-calorie diet and physical activity is challenging. Weight loss is associated with a reduction in the amount of calories needed to maintain the body at rest, called the resting energy expenditure (REE), which may be a probable mechanism for this lack of WLM. Most individuals are unable to adequately change their diet and increase their physical activity levels to overcome this decrease in REE which prevents WLM. Therefore, techniques that increase REE may promote WLM in these individuals. Pre-clinical studies for Empagliflozin - Sodium-glucose Cotransporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitor have shown an increase in REE. Thus, in addition to reducing the cardiovascular risk, SGLT2 inhibitor may promote WLM by increasing REE. This study aims to promote WLM in obese individuals by increasing the REE using SGLT2 inhibitor therapy.

NCT ID: NCT05878912 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

The Effect of Obesity and Weight Loss in Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction

OWL-HFPEF
Start date: January 20, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study looks at the effects of weight loss in people who have heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and are overweight or obese. The main questions it aims to answer are whether weight loss in this group of people improves: 1. The heart's shape, how well it pumps blood and how well it uses fuels 2. The person's quality of life and how much they can exercise Participants will attend 2 study visits, separated by 3-6 months. The intervention period takes place in between the 2 study visits. Each study visit will involve measurements including: - Symptom and quality of life questionnaires - Body measurements such as height and weight - Blood tests - Ultrasound scans of the heart (echocardiogram) - Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans of the heart - Exercise components during the scans - 6 minute walk test Participants are randomly allocated (in other words, by lottery) to either 'diet' or 'control' groups. The control group will continue standard care. The diet group will be enrolled in a weight loss program supervised by the study team. Participants in the diet group will replace their usual meals with meal replacement products specifically designed to deliver a low calorie diet for weight loss. The products will consist of formula soups, shakes and porridges. This diet would last 8 weeks, followed by a guided period of food reintroduction and maintenance.

NCT ID: NCT05874635 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Signos DM2 Empowerment Study (SIGNOS-CGM-EMPOWER-201-2022)

Start date: May 11, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) in earlier data has inspired behavioral changes leading to improved adherence to an exercise plan in individuals and eating habits in people with diabetes. Mobile health (mHealth) platforms provide satisfactory, easy-to-use tools to help participants in the pursuit of weight change goals. We hypothesize that the use of CGM data and the Signos mHealth platform will assist with weight control in a population of people with type 2 diabetes mellitus who are not using insulin.

NCT ID: NCT05861973 Not yet recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

SMARTer Weight Loss Management

SMARTer
Start date: March 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The SMARTer trial will be a three-arm, randomized controlled non-inferiority trial that compares the optimized, adaptive SMARTer intervention, fixed DPP, and usual care assessment-only (Control). The trial will address whether a scalable, stepped-care intervention can stand up to gold-standard DPP by achieving comparable weight loss at a lower cost. Alongside evaluation of clinical non-inferiority, a comprehensive economic evaluation will inform relative affordability. Cost information is important to inform treatment policy and change standard of care, but is sorely lacking for behavioral interventions. The SMARTer intervention reduces costs by initially offering minimal intervention to all and stepping up to offer more costly treatment components only to non-responders who fail to attain the target weight loss. A rigorous economic evaluation planned and designed alongside the SMARTer trial will provide an accurate, robust head-to-head comparison of costs, cost-effectiveness, and projected lifetime health care costs between the three arms.

NCT ID: NCT05859867 Recruiting - Obesity Clinical Trials

Bimbingamba Zerosix Third Phase: Studying Communities

Bimbingamba
Start date: April 15, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Childhood obesity is increasing in the last years especially in developed countries, and, as well as adult obesity, is related to the development of pathologies. Unfortunately, the restoration of a normal weight condition, if the ponderal excess rose in the first years of life, seems very difficult. Despite the importance of this issue, there is a paucity of evidence demonstrating effective interventions in reducing weight over time. The observation that in developed countries childhood obesity appears with evident social and geographical gradients justifies the implementation of inter-sectoral interventions of primary prevention, to be declined at the contextual level: family and community. Nowadays, there are numerous interventions for the promotion of lifestyle in pediatric age, in particular, those aimed at primary school and adolescence. On the other hand, few interventions were directed at the 0-7 age group. Therefore, this community intervention trial involved the pediatric population (aged 0-7 years) and their families, and it is aimed at the prevention of obesity and the restoring normal weight through community interventions aimed at improving lifestyles and with them the bio-metric parameters, health and well-being outcomes and soft skills in the population aged 0-7 years. The target population is children aged 0-7 years resident in the two municipalities (Mondovì and Savigliano), respectively selected as Intervention and Control Common. Totally, to conduct this study 2000 children, of both sex, will be enrolled (near 1000 for each of the two Municipalities).