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Safety and efficacy of hydrothermal duodenal mucosal resurfacing in patients with type 2 diabetes: The randomised, double-blind, sham-controlled, multicentre REVITA-2 feasibility trial

Authors :
Mingrone, Geltrude
van Baar, Annieke A.C.
Devière, Jacques
Hopkins, David
Moura, Eduardo
Cercato, Cintia
Rajagopalan, Harith
Lopez-Talavera, Juan Carlos
White, Kelly
Bhambhani, Vijeta
Costamagna, Guido
Haidry, Rehan R.J.
Grecco, Eduardo
Galvao Neto, Manoel M.P.
Aithal, Guruprasad P
Repici, Alessandro
Hayee, Bu'Hussain
Haji, Amyn
Morris, Allan John
Bisschops, Raf
Chouhan, Manil M.D.
Sakai, Naomi N.S.
Bhatt, Deepak D.L.
Sanyal, Arun Jayant
Bergman, Jacques J.J.G.H.M.
Mingrone, Geltrude
van Baar, Annieke A.C.
Devière, Jacques
Hopkins, David
Moura, Eduardo
Cercato, Cintia
Rajagopalan, Harith
Lopez-Talavera, Juan Carlos
White, Kelly
Bhambhani, Vijeta
Costamagna, Guido
Haidry, Rehan R.J.
Grecco, Eduardo
Galvao Neto, Manoel M.P.
Aithal, Guruprasad P
Repici, Alessandro
Hayee, Bu'Hussain
Haji, Amyn
Morris, Allan John
Bisschops, Raf
Chouhan, Manil M.D.
Sakai, Naomi N.S.
Bhatt, Deepak D.L.
Sanyal, Arun Jayant
Bergman, Jacques J.J.G.H.M.
Source :
Gut
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective: Hydrothermal duodenal mucosal resurfacing (DMR) is a safe, outpatient endoscopic procedure. REVITA-2, a double-blind, superiority randomised controlled trial, investigates safety and efficacy of DMR using the single catheter Revita system (Revita DMR (catheter and system)), on glycaemic control and liver fat content in type 2 diabetes (T2D). Design: Eligible patients (haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) 59-86 mmol/mol, body mass index≥24 and ≤40 kg/m2, fasting insulin >48.6 pmol/L, ≥1 oral antidiabetic medication) enrolled in Europe and Brazil. Primary endpoints were safety, change from baseline in HbA1c at 24 weeks, and liver MRI proton-density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF) at 12 weeks. Results: Overall mITT (DMR n=56; sham n=52), 24 weeks post DMR, median (IQR) HbA1c change was -10.4 (18.6) mmol/mol in DMR group versus -7.1 (16.4) mmol/mol in sham group (p=0.147). In patients with baseline liver MRI-PDFF >5% (DMR n=48; sham n=43), 12-week post-DMR liver-fat change was -5.4 (5.6)% in DMR group versus -2.9 (6.2)% in sham group (p=0.096). Results from prespecified interaction testing and clinical parameter assessment showed heterogeneity between European (DMR n=39; sham n=37) and Brazilian (DMR n=17; sham n=16) populations (p=0.063); therefore, results were stratified by region. In European mITT, 24 weeks post DMR, median (IQR) HbA1c change was -6.6 mmol/mol (17.5 mmol/mol) versus -3.3 mmol/mol (10.9 mmol/mol) post-sham (p=0.033); 12-week post-DMR liver-fat change was -5.4% (6.1%) versus -2.2% (4.3%) post-sham (p=0.035). Brazilian mITT results trended towards DMR benefit in HbA1c, but not liver fat, in context of a large sham effect. In overall PP, patients with high baseline fasting plasma glucose ((FPG)≥10 mmol/L) had significantly greater reductions in HbA1c post-DMR versus sham (p=0.002). Most adverse events were mild and transient. Conclusions: DMR is safe and exerts beneficial disease-modifying metabolic effects in T2D with or without non-alcoholic liver disease, part<br />SCOPUS: ar.j<br />info:eu-repo/semantics/published

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Gut
Notes :
1 full-text file(s): application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1258101937
Document Type :
Electronic Resource