Advertising disclosure: we may earn a commission when you buy through links on this site. How we make money

HomeTrials › NCT02944500

Obesity & weight · Phase 4 · Active, not recruiting

Saxenda: Underlying Mechanisms and Clinical Outcomes

NCT02944500 · Sponsor: Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

What this trial means for you

This study is active, not recruiting — it is not currently taking new participants, but its results may matter for treatments you're considering. It's studying liraglutide for obesity.

Who can joinAll sexes, 18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteersAccepted
What you'd takeliraglutide
Study length~10.6 years overall
Planned participants28
TypeInterventional (you receive treatment)

What participants typically get: study medication (or placebo, if the trial uses one) and study-related medical care at no cost, plus close monitoring. Compensation for time and travel varies by study — ask the site. Note that in many trials you can't choose your treatment group, and some participants receive a placebo.

The study, in the sponsor's words

The purpose of this protocol is to investigate the effect of treatment with the study drug Liraglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, on centers of the brain that control appetite and food intake.

Can you join? The exact criteria

Below is the verbatim eligibility text from the registry — bring it to your doctor; it's written for clinicians, and your own clinician is the right person to interpret it with you.

Full eligibility criteria (for you and your doctor)

Inclusion Criteria: * Obese: BMI\> 30 kg/m2 or \>27 kg/m2 with comorbidities (including but not limited to insulin resistance, hypertension, dyslipidemia, cardiovascular disease, stroke, sleep apnea, gallbladder disease, hyperuricemia and gout, and osteoarthritis). Exclusion Criteria: 1. Women who are breastfeeding, pregnant, or wanting to become pregnant. 2. Women using metal IUD 3. Any change in the dosage of hormonal contraceptive medications (birth control pills, implanon). Subjects should remain on same medication/ same dose during the time of the entire study. 4. Moderate (creatinine clearance of 30-59 ml/min) and severe renal impairment (creatinine clearance below 30 ml/min) and end-stage renal disease 5. Moderate, or severe hepatic impairment 6. Hypersensitivity to the active substance or any of the excipients in liraglutide 7. History of diabetic ketoacidosis 8. Congestive heart failure 9. EKG abnormalities (as listed above) 10. Inflammatory conditions like inflammatory bowel disease, Rheumatoid arthritis etc 11. Gastroparesis 12. Pancreatitis 13. Gallstones- as they may cause increased risk of pancreatitis 14. Alcohol consumption- the maximum quantity for men is 140g-210g per week. For women, the range is 84g-140g per week or drinking as consuming no more than two drinks a day for men and one for women. Alcohol can cause increased risk of pancreatitis and hypoglycemia. 15. Untreated thyroid disease like hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism 16. Subjects taking the following medications: warfarin, steroids (inhaled or systemic due to reduced hypoglycemic effect), and subjects on other hormones (LHRH analogs etc). 17. Subjects on any oral anti-diabetic agent except metformin 18. Personal or family history of MEN II or medullary thyroid cancer 19. Subjects with any type of bioimplant activated by mechanical, electronic, or magnetic means (e.g. cochlear implants, pacemakers, neuron or biostimulators, electronic infusion pumps, etc.) 20. Subjects with any type of metallic implant that could potentially be displaced or damaged during MRI, such as aneurysm clips, metallic skull plates, surgical implants etc. or metal containing tattoos 21. Anxiety of small spaces and/or claustrophobia 22. Uncontrolled cardiac impairment, circulatory impairment, or inability to perspire (poor thermoregulatory function) 23. Significant sensory or motor impairment 24. Epilepsy, particularly photo-sensitive epilepsy, which may place the individual at a higher risk for adverse events during fMRI scanning with visual stimulation 25. Subjects with neurological or psychological problems which may interfere with or complicate testing (e.g. presence of titubation) 26. Body weight above the limitation of the MRI scanning table (330lbs/150 Kg) or body dimensions that could difficult the performance of the scan. 27. Subjects who cannot adhere to the experimental protocol for any reason 28. Anemia with Hgb less than 10 29. Uncontrolled infectious diseases (e.g. HIV, hepatitis, chronic infections etc) 30. Any uncontrolled endocrine condition, e.g Cushing's, Acromegaly, etc 31. Any cancers or lymphoma 32. Eating disorders like anorexia, bulimia 33. Severe hypertriglyceridemia (triglycerides \>500 mg/dl) 34. Weight loss surgery or gastrectomy 35. Any changes in medications that affect brain function, e.g. anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, anti-anxiety, anti-seizure medications, antihypertensives etc (subjects should remain on same medication/ same dose during the time of the entire study). 36. Vegetarians- as food images presented will include numerous non-vegetarian items and thus will not be appealing as high calorie food items. 37. Suicidality, as measured by the MSSI at screening visit.

Study sites by state

Massachusetts

  • Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center General Clinical Research Center — Boston

View the official record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Verify before you act. Medical disclaimer: content on this site is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. GLP-1 medications are prescription drugs; always consult a licensed healthcare provider about eligibility, risks, and benefits. Trial details and enrollment status change frequently — always verify on the official registry and talk to your own clinician before contacting a study site. This page was generated from registry data and is not affiliated with the study sponsor.

Follow this trial

Get an email when our monthly digest covers enrollment changes and results for trials like this one.

Newsletter signup launches soon. (Site owner: set PUBLIC_BUTTONDOWN_USERNAME in .env to activate this form.)

Keep researching on StudyBackedHealth