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Lipoma is a relatively common, slow-growing mesenchymal neoplasm originating from adipose tissue. Patients seek treatment for lipomas for various reasons, such as concerns about their growth and spread, aesthetic issues, or worries about the compressive effects of the lipoma. Lipomas are typically removed surgically through excision, which can have complications including bleeding, infection, scarring, and recurrence. Other mentioned treatment methods include liposuction, laser, and medicinal approaches.
Purified synthetic deoxycholic acid has been introduced as the first pharmacological intervention approved by the FDA for the reduction of submental fat. Deoxycholic acid is a type of bile acid that, due to its ability to cause non-selective cell lysis and disruption of adipocyte membranes (adipocytolysis), leads to emulsification of fat in the intestine.
This is an interventional (pre-post), single-arm, and open-label study to evaluate the efficacy and safety of Embella (Deoxycholic acid, produced by Espad Pharmed Co.) for the management of superficial lipomas.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Men and women aging between 18 to 65 years
Having at least one lipoma (based on clinical and sonographic diagnosis), which is accessible for treatment and assessment and is quantifiable along at least 2 perpendicular diameters and lower than 2 centimeter in depth, with the following characteristics:
Stable body weight with a body mass index of less than 30 kg/m² in the past three months
Signed informed consent
Ability to follow study instructions and likely to complete all required visits
Agreement to abstain from any treatment for lipomas during the study
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Kamran Balighi, Prof. Derm; Hamidreza kafi, PHD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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