Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05542147

Genetic-Dependent Cardiovascular Response to PPAR-Alpha Agonist Fenofibrate

Physiopathological Study of Genetic Modulation of Cardiovascular Effect of PPAR-Alpha Activation (MAGNETIC-PPARA)

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (actual)
Sponsor
Mario Luca Morieri · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 75 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Fenofibrate, a peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPAR-a) agonist known to improve diabetic dyslipidemia, has been proposed as a drug to prevent cardiovascular disease (CVD) in type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, the results of clinical trials have been mixed. Supporting the hypothesis that these disappointing results hide a genetic heterogeneity in the CVD response to fenofibrate, a common genetic variant (rs6008845) in the gene coding for PPAR-a has been found to dramatically influence the ability of this drug to reduce CVD events in the ACCORD Lipid trial (PMID:31974142). The aim of this study is to validate these findings by dissecting the pathways and mechanism through which this variant exerts such a modulatory effect, by means of a randomized clinical trial. If successful, this project will pave the way to a precision medicine approach to prescribe fenofibrate optimally, offering a cardio-protective drug to those patients that are most likely to experience a robust benefit from this medication.

Detailed description

The main hypothesis of this study is that underlying genetic heterogeneity in the CV response to fibrates can successfully identify subjects with a consistent benefit from this treatment. Supporting this postulate a common genetic variant (rs6008845) in the gene coding for PPAR-alpha has been found to dramatically influence the ability of this drug to reduce CVD events. This genetic modulation of fenofibrate effectiveness has been found in whites, validated in black participants in the ACCORD Lipid trial, and then replicated in external cohorts. Interestingly, the genetic effect was independent of fenofibrate-induced changes in plasma lipids, suggesting a more complex mechanism of action of fibrates. (PMID:31974142). Through this randomized study, subjects carrying the different rs6008845 genotypes (TT, TC, CC) will be randomized to receive fenofibrate or placebo for 12 weeks. The specific aims are: * To replicate the previous "rs6008845 by fenofibrate" interaction on MACE, testing the fenofibrate-induced changes in endothelial function, arterial stiffness, and markers of endothelium damage. * To evaluate whether the fenofibrate-induced change on circulating biomarkers is modulated by rs6008845 genotypes. This will provide insight into the mechanism(s) behind the rs6008845 modulation of fenofibrate effectiveness by the identification of circulating biomarkers mirroring this genetic effect. Different known actions of fenofibrate, beyond lipid-lowering effects, such as fenofibrate anti-inflammatory and anti-platelet effects will be evaluated.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGFenofibrate 145 mg1 tablet per day
DRUGPlacebo1 tablet per day

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-03
Primary completion
2024-11-30
Completion
2024-11-30
First posted
2022-09-15
Last updated
2025-08-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05542147. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.