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CompletedNCT05919992

The Role of Glucocorticoids to Maintain Energy Homeostasis During Starvation (Gluco-Starve)

The Role of Glucocorticoids to Maintain Energy Homeostasis During Starvation

Status
Completed
Phase
EARLY_Phase 1
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
24 (actual)
Sponsor
Eleonora Seelig · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years – 40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

In a randomized, cross-over study, 20 healthy volunteers will receive a block and replace therapy that mimics physiological GC rhythm (metyrapone plus hydrocortisone) or placebo. Participants will undergo two identical fasting periods with each treatment. With the block and replace therapy, fasting-induced GC peak will be suppressed. Metabolic and autonomic parameters will be compared to reveal whether GCs mediate the physiological adaptions to caloric restriction. Understanding acute effects of GCs upon caloric restriction is critical, since repetitive disruptions of GC secretion may become harmful in chronic conditions.

Detailed description

Obesity is one of the major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Achieving long-term weight loss is challenging, as the body counteracts weight loss to preserve energy by increasing appetite and lowering energy expenditure. These physiological defense mechanisms are the main obstacle to successful weight reduction in obese people. Therefore, identifying the signals that defend body weight during caloric restriction is essential for developing new antiobesity drugs. Corticosteroids mediate the physiological defense to starvation in rodents. Whether cortisol has the same impact on humans is unknown. Therefore, we investigate whether cortisol regulates the physiological adaptions to caloric restriction in humans. The general objective of this project is to investigate whether cortisol mediates physiological adaptions to caloric restriction. The primary objective is to test whether cortisol mediates the increased appetite during caloric restriction. Secondary objectives are to test whether the cortisol response to caloric restriction affects satiation, satiety, energy expenditure, substrate utilization, blood pressure, weight, body composition, secretion of neuroendocrine hormones, lipids, glucose, ketone bodies, sympathetic nervous system activity, immune cells, and inflammatory markers. This is a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study. After screening, subjects will be randomized to two crossover 7-day study periods with a wash-out period of 28 days: A) Participants will receive hydrocortisone 19.9 mg/d subcutaneously via a pump in a pulsed fashion (eight times/day) and metyrapone capsules per os (starting with a dose of 500 mg/d on day 1 to 3000mg/d on day 5, and then will be kept constant until day 7). B) Participants will receive a placebo (0,9% NaCl solution) subcutaneously via a pump in a pulsed fashion and identical-looking placebo capsules per os with the same regimen as for metyrapone. During both study periods, participants will undergo two days of caloric restriction.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGMetyrapone 250 mg Oral TabletsDuring one phase of the study: Metyrapone (pills of 250mg) on empty stomach: Day 1 0-1-1, day 2 1-2-2, day 3 2-3-3 day 4 3-4-4 day 5 4-4-4 day 6 4-4-4 day 7 4-0-0
DRUGHydrocortisone 19.9mg s.c., pulsatile with a flow rate of 10μl/sHydrocortisone will be delivered subcutaneously via a pump in a pulsed fashion with a flow rate of 10μl/s from day 1 to day 7 in a total daily dose of 19.9mg
DRUGPlacebo 250 mg TabletsDuring another phase of the study: identical looking placebo pills starting Day 1 0-1-1, day 2 1-2-2, day 3 2-3-3 day 4 3-4-4 day 5 4-4-4 day 6 4-4-4 day 7 4-0-0
DRUGPlacebo (0,9% NaCl solution)Placebo (0,9% NaCl solution) 19.9 mg/d subcutaneously via a pump in a pulsed fashion with a flow rate of 10μl/s from day 1 to day 7

Timeline

Start date
2023-05-15
Primary completion
2024-07-25
Completion
2024-07-25
First posted
2023-06-27
Last updated
2024-08-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Switzerland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05919992. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.