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EndoBarrier Versus Intragastric Balloon in Obese Diabetic Patients

T

The Mediterranean Institute for Transplantation and Advanced Specialized Therapies

Status and phase

Unknown
Phase 4

Conditions

Obesity
Type 2 Diabetes

Treatments

Device: Easy life balloon
Device: EndoBarrier Gastrointestinal Liner

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01848795
IRRB/30/10

Details and patient eligibility

About

Obese patients with Type 2 diabetes (T2D) have a 80-98% chance of having their disease cured or improved following bariatric surgery. This could be explained by weight loss or by changes of nutrient absorption or gut hormone secretion. The comparison of glucose metabolism in patients undergoing malabsorptive or mechanical procedures will clarify this matter. EndoBarrier is an endoscopically delivered device that mimics malabsorptive surgical procedures while the endoscopically placed intragastric balloon induces weight loss with a mechanical action.

The present study hypothesis is that the bypass of the first portion of the intestine obtained with the EndoBarrier will be more effective in improving glucose metabolism than the reduction of food intake obtained with the intragastric balloon. Since similar weight loss is expected in the two groups, the study will aid in understanding the mechanisms behind the metabolic improvement seeing after intestine bypass.

Full description

Bariatric surgery is an effective therapy for obesity. Malabsorption-based surgical techniques (excluding the first part of the gastrointestinal tract from the alimentary circuit) are also effective in correcting T2D, even before any significant weight loss has occurred. Proposed mechanisms to explain this beneficial effect include caloric restriction, altered secretion of gut hormones due to duodenal exclusion or due to contact of undigested food with the jejunal mucosa, pancreatic islet hyperfunction, changes of intestinal flora, mucosal inflammation, and/or changes in the biliary acid re-circulation.

EndoBarrier is an endoscopically delivered device that mimics malabsorptive surgical procedures while the endoscopically placed intragastric balloon induces weight loss with a mechanical action.

The present study is a prospective, randomized clinical trial. It will compare the metabolic compensation between patient treated with EndoBarrier and patient treated with Intragastric Balloon.

The aims will be: comparison of glycemic control as measured by hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), change in oral hypoglycemic drug consumption and body loss from baseline and during follow up in the two groups; evaluation of mechanisms implicated in glycemic control by measuring basal and stimulated insular hormones, glucose levels and gastrointestinal hormones; creation of a bio-bank and dedicated database to collect biological samples for further future studies.

Obese adult T2D patients (BMI ≥ 30) with diabetes duration <10 years will be randomized to receive either EndoBarrier (n=45) or Intragastric Balloon (n=45). The devices will be implanted and kept in place for the first 12 months of study and then removed. Clinical and biochemical data will be collected every 3 months during the 12 months of implant and for the subsequent 12 months after removal.

Statistics describing variables at baseline, at subsequent visits and at the end of the study will be produced for both groups of patients. The Student's t-test will be used for a cross-sectional analysis while the mixed model system will be used for longitudinal observations. Multivariate analysis will also be applied to better characterize differences that may be seen between the two groups.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults (18-60 year old)
  • Type 2 Diabetes diagnosed less than 10 years ago
  • Obesity (BMI > 30)

Exclusion criteria

  • pregnancy
  • inflammatory bowel disease
  • peptic ulcer
  • gastrointestinal disease preventing device positioning
  • pancreatitis,
  • coronary artery disease
  • symptomatic pulmonary disease
  • infection at the time of device placement,
  • high risk of gastrointestinal bleeding (coagulopathy, bleeding diathesis, anti-coagulant therapy, Non-Steroid Anti-Inflammatory Drugs)
  • altered GI anatomy that could affect device placement
  • contraindication of positioning of the devices as per technical description of the producer
  • C-peptide negative diabetes
  • failure to understand the study protocol or not willing to undergo planned follow-up

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

90 participants in 2 patient groups

EndoBarrier Gastrointestinal Liner
Experimental group
Description:
The treatment in this arm is the endoscopic positioning of the EndoBarrier Gastrointestinal Liner and follow up.
Treatment:
Device: EndoBarrier Gastrointestinal Liner
Intragastric Balloon
Active Comparator group
Description:
The treatment in this arm is the endoscopic positioning of the intragastric balloon (Easy life balloon) as a comparator and follow up.
Treatment:
Device: Easy life balloon

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Mario Traina, MD; Anna Casu, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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