LOSE-AF: Can Weight Loss Help Patients With Atrial Fibrillation? (LOSE-AF)
Atrial Fibrillation, Overweight and Obesity
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Atrial Fibrillation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Persistent AF
- Body mass index ≥27 kg/m2
Exclusion Criteria:
- Planned catheter ablation for AF within 8 months
- Learning difficulties or unable to understand English
- Participation in another research trial involving an investigational product or weight loss programme in the prior 3 months
- Current treatment with anti-obesity drugs
- Contraindication to MR imaging (metal implants or claustrophobia)
- Uncontrolled endocrine disorders
- Diabetes requiring insulin
- Active gout or history of recurrent gout
- Ongoing gallbladder disease
- Serious underlying medical or psychiatric disorder; e.g., known cancer or any other significant disease affecting short-term life expectancy; severe valvular disease, myocardial infarction or stroke within the previous 6 months; severe heart failure; eating disorder or purging behaviour; severe psychotic disorder requiring hospitalisation or supervised care, active liver disease (except non-alcoholic fatty liver disease).
- Unintentional weight loss of more than 5 kg within the prior 6 months
- Gastrointestinal malabsorption
- Unstable INR (persistently <2 for >14 days) or supra-therapeutic levels with concomitant bleeding or requiring hospitalisation
- Substance abuse
- Taking varenicline (smoking cessation medication)
- Chronic renal failure of stage 4 or 5
- Porphyria
Sites / Locations
- Oxford Centre for Magnetic Resonance (OCMR)Recruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Active Comparator
Meal Replacement Weight Loss Programme
Usual Care
The study intervention will be the referral to a commercial provider (CP) offering a Meal Replacement Weight Loss Programme with behavioural support. Briefly, participants will be referred to a nominated CP local counsellor who will set regular appointments during a period of 32-to-36 weeks to provide behavioural support, weight monitoring, and deliver formula meals. All counsellors delivering the programme will receive, beyond their routine training and accreditation, specific information related to this study before being allocated patients. The programme conventionally includes the 3 phases (meal replacement phase, transition phase, and weight maintenance phase) but the Consultant will have full discretion to modify and tailor this programme to suit each individual participant.
Participants randomised to the control group will receive best usual care, consisting of a one-off face-to-face consultation on weight loss with a nurse at baseline (~15 min at the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford) together with supporting written information (i.e. a copy of the booklet 'Facts not fads - Your simple guide to healthy weight loss.')