Natriuretic-ureothelic Adaptation of Body Fluid Homeostasis During SGLT-2 Inhibition and/or Mineralocorticoid Receptor Modulation in Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease. A 4-arm, Double-blind, Double-dummy, Parallel-group, Phase 2 Study to Investigate the Mechanistic Effects of Dapagliflozin, Dapagliflozin + Balcinrenone, Balcinrenone and Placebo on Body Solute and Water Homeostasis and Energy Metabolism in Male and Female Participants Over 50 Years of Age With Chronic Kidney Disease.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the mechanistic effects of dapagliflozin 10 mg, alone or in combination with balcinrenone 150 mg, with balcinrenone 150 mg and placebo, on the way the body handles electrolytes and water content, as well as the effects these interventions may have on energy metabolism in participants with stage 3 chronic kidney disease. The study interventions will be administered orally, daily, in addition to current therapy, for a duration of 28 days. This will allow us to maximize our ability to detect a drug effect while minimizing the drop-out rate that accompanies longer studies. In order to understand the different mechanistic effects of these interventions on energy metabolism, the study will be conducted at two study sites. The study design and treatment allocation, treatment duration as well as sample analysis for evaluation of the primary endpoint will be identical for all participants, at both sites. Therefore, urine and plasma samples for analysis of water and electrolyte handling will be collected from all study participants at both sites. In addition to the primary endpoint, the main study site (Nuremberg) will conduct a metabolic study to investigate the early- and late-effects of the interventions, while the second site, Marseille, will conduct an imaging sub-study to assess changes at the tissue level before and after treatment.
ACHT - Adipositas Care & Health Therapy Zur Strukturierten, sektorenübergreifenden Versorgung Nach Bariatrisch-metabolischer Operation
ACHT - Adipositas Care and Health Therapy - is a structured, digitally-supported, cross-sectoral and close to home program developed for the postoperative care of patients following obesity surgery. The aim is to ensure the long-term success of therapy following bariatric surgery. ACHT was selected by the Federal Joint Commission for support under the Innovation Fund. The project started in July 2019 and will end in December 2022.