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Can Brisk Walking Combined With Ingestion of a Lipid-lowering Drug Improve Fat Metabolism in Muscle?

L

Liverpool John Moores University

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Pre Diabetes

Treatments

Other: Blood samples
Diagnostic Test: Maximal aerobic fitness test
Diagnostic Test: Oral glucose tolerance test
Diagnostic Test: Body Composition
Other: Muscle biopsy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Briefly, participants will be assessed for their eligibility for the study using an oral glucose tolerance test, which involves drinking a sugary drink followed by a series of small blood samples. If eligible, participants will be asked to take part in a fitness test and then two trials which will involve walking on a treadmill at a steady pace. Before and after the exercise a small piece of muscle will be taken from their thigh under local anaesthesia, as well as several small blood samples. Muscle muscle samples will be assessed for lipid metabolites.

Full description

The accumulation of fat in skeletal muscle is linked with insulin resistance in obesity and T2D. However, fat also accumulates in the muscle of lean, healthy people, but they remain insulin sensitive. This is because healthy people are able to burn this fat to generate energy during exercise. However, overweight/obese inactive people can't use muscle fat during exercise in the same manner, which is related to the high blood lipid concentrations that are observed in these individuals. Acipimox is a lipid-lowering agent that specifically reduces the breakdown of fat in adipose tissue and has been shown improve the blood lipid profile of obese individuals and T2D patients, at least in the short-term (1-2 weeks). Previous research has shown that the combination of Acipimox with exercise restores the ability of obese people to burn fat during moderate-intensity cycling exercise. It is now important to test whether Acipimox also increases the ability to burn muscle fat during low-intensity walking in people with prediabetes. If it does, then the next step will be to test whether the combination of Acipimox and walking can lead to improved insulin sensitivity and reduced T2D risk over a longer intervention programme. Twelve people with pre-diabetes will be recruited to undertake two experimental trials in a randomised order. Each trial will involve walking for 45 minutes on a treadmill, with muscle biopsies obtained from the thigh before (basal), immediately following (post-exercise) and 3 h post-exercise. Each trial will be identical, except that participants will ingest either Acipimox or a placebo in a double-blind design. Muscle biopsies will be used to examine differences in muscle fat between the two trials.

Enrollment

12 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

25 to 55 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged 25-55 years
  • Overweight or obese (BMI >28 kg.m-2)
  • Have prediabetes
  • Not currently using any anti-diabetes medication
  • Physically inactive (performing less than two 30 min structured exercise sessions per week for the last year)
  • Not pregnant (or intending to get pregnant during the study) or currently breast feeding
  • Pre-menopausal
  • Not currently involved in a weight loss programme or using weight loss medication

Exclusion criteria

  • Involved in regular exercise (engaged in more than 2 sessions of structured exercise of >30 min per week)
  • Currently using anti-diabetes medication (e.g. insulin, metformin)
  • Currently using niacin/vitamin B3 supplements
  • Pregnant or breast feeding
  • Currently engaged in active weight loss programmes or using weight loss medication
  • Diagnosed with chronic kidney disease

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

12 participants in 2 patient groups

Acipimox ingestion
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will undergo pre assessment testing of a body composition (DEXA), a maximal aerobic fitness test, and an oral glucose tolerance test. Following this, participants will ingest 250 mg of Acipimox, before undertaking 45 minutes walking on a treadmill. A muscle biopsy will be taken pre, immediately post and 3 hours post the walking trial. Blood samples will be taken at regular intervals throughout.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Body Composition
Other: Muscle biopsy
Diagnostic Test: Oral glucose tolerance test
Other: Blood samples
Diagnostic Test: Maximal aerobic fitness test
No drug
Other group
Description:
Participants will undergo pre assessment testing of a body composition (DEXA), a maximal aerobic fitness test, and an oral glucose tolerance test.Participants will then undergo a 45 minute walk on a treadmill with no Acipimox ingestion. A muscle biopsy will be taken pre, immediately post and 3 hours post the walking trial. Blood samples will be taken at regular intervals throughout.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: Body Composition
Other: Muscle biopsy
Diagnostic Test: Oral glucose tolerance test
Other: Blood samples
Diagnostic Test: Maximal aerobic fitness test

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jennifer S Barrett, PhD; Sam Shepherd, Dr

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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