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Obesity and overweight are rising in Chinese populations, where metabolic risks begin at lower BMI thresholds than in Western cohorts. Many individuals with overweight or mild-to-moderate obesity are ineligible or unwilling to undergo bariatric surgery due to invasiveness and risk. Endoscopic bariatric and metabolic therapies offer minimally invasive alternatives but vary in complexity, cost, and safety profiles. Investigators developed a sutureless endoscopic procedure, Endoscopic Radial Compression Gastroplasty (ERCG), which reduces gastric volume by apposing gastric walls using a clip-and-loop system. This randomized controlled trial evaluates the efficacy and safety of ERCG versus an optimized lifestyle intervention in Asian adults with BMI 24.0-37.4 kg/m² who have not succeeded with conservative measures. Preliminary studies suggest ERCG can achieve approximately 12% total body weight loss (TBWL) at 3 months. The primary endpoint is percent TBWL at 3 months; secondary outcomes include changes in BMI, metabolic parameters, quality of life, and adverse events. Results are expected to inform the role of ERCG as a safe, effective, and scalable option between conservative care and bariatric surgery.
Full description
The prevalence of obesity and overweight continues to increase worldwide, and Chinese populations are particularly vulnerable due to lower thresholds for metabolic risk compared with Western populations. Individuals with overweight or mild-to-moderate obesity (BMI 24.0-37.4 kg/m²) often fail conservative measures but are ineligible or unwilling to undergo bariatric surgery because of its invasiveness, risk, and costs. This creates an unmet need for minimally invasive, effective, and scalable interventions.
Endoscopic bariatric and metabolic therapies (EBMTs) have emerged as alternatives, but many existing procedures involve technically complex endoscopic suturing, high costs, or device-related risks. Investigators developed ERCG, a novel endoscopic procedure that reduces gastric volume by apposing the gastric walls using a newly designed clip-and-loop system. Preliminary studies demonstrated that ERCG can induce rapid weight loss, with mean percent total body weight loss (TBWL) of approximately 12% at 3 months, while maintaining a favorable safety profile.
This randomized controlled trial aims to evaluate the efficacy and safety of ERCG compared with an optimized lifestyle intervention (OLI) in Chinese adults with overweight and mild-to-moderate obesity who have failed conservative weight reduction efforts. Eligible participants will be randomized 1:1 into two groups. The experimental group will undergo ERCG under general anesthesia or deep sedation, following a standardized perioperative protocol, then receive structured OLI. The control group will receive structured OLI consisting of individualized dietary counseling, caloric restriction, exercise prescription, and behavioral support. Follow-up visits are scheduled at 1 month, 2 month, 3 month and 6 month after enrollment.
The primary endpoint is percent TBWL at 3 months, assessed using standardized weight measurement protocols. Secondary endpoints include %EBWL at 3 and 6 months, changes in BMI, metabolic parameters (fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c, insulin resistance indices, lipid profile), quality of life assessed by validated questionnaires (IWQOL-Lite), and the incidence of adverse events classified according to international standards.
Randomization will be computer-generated with concealed allocation, and outcome assessors will be blinded to treatment assignment. Analyses will follow the intention-to-treat principle with appropriate methods for handling missing data.
The study is expected to generate high-quality evidence regarding the short-term and medium-term efficacy of ERCG, to clarify its safety profile, and to determine whether ERCG can serve as a safe and scalable option bridging the therapeutic gap between conservative lifestyle approaches and bariatric surgery for overweight and mildly to moderately obese Chinese populations.
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216 participants in 2 patient groups
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Yan Liu, M.D. PH.D.; Yiyu Qiao, M.D. PH.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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