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Active clinical trials for "Pediatric Obesity"

Results 1-10 of 921

Brighter Bites & UT Physicians Produce Rx Program

ObesityChildhood

The purpose of this study is to clinically evaluate the effectiveness of an at-home produce delivery prescription or grocery store vouchers prescription at improving weight status and obesity-related health outcomes of participants across the two clinics as compared to a control group and to examine the impacts of the program on child dietary behavioral outcomes (child fruit and vegetable intake, junk food consumption, and eating at any type of restaurant), and parent feeding practices (preparing foods from scratch, use of nutrition facts labels to make purchasing decisions, and eating meals with their referent child)

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Young Adults With Early-onset Obesity Treated With Semaglutide

ObesityAdolescent

Introduction: The increasing prevalence of obesity is particularly pronounced among adolescents. Currently available treatment options consist of structured lifestyle interventions. However, 25 % of adolescents do not respond to lifestyle treatment, why new effective treatment strategies are needed. Therefore, the aim of this study is to investigate the effect of lifestyle interventions combined with the GLP-1 receptor agonist semaglutide to young adults with otherwise treatment resistant obesity. Methods and analysis: This is an investigator-initiated, randomized, placebo-controlled trial. 130-170 young adults (age 18-28) will be recruited from The Children's Obesity Clinic (TCOC), Department of Pediatrics, Holbæk Hospital. Based on their previous response to the TCOC protocol the participants will be divided in three groups: Group A: Non-responders: 55-75 young adults (BMI>30 kg/m2) who have not succeeded in losing weight during the structured lifestyle intervention (BMI SDS reduction <0.1) Group B: Insufficient responders: 55-75 young adults (BMI>30 kg/m2) who have succeeded in losing weight during the structured lifestyle intervention (BMI SDS reduction >0.25), but still have obesity. Group C: Excellent responders: 20 young adults, who have succeeded in losing weight during the structured lifestyle intervention (BMI SDS reduction >0.5) and no longer have obesity (BMI<30 kg/m2). Group A and B are randomized 2:1 to either semaglutide or placebo for 68 weeks. Group C will attend baseline examinations only and not undergo intervention. The primary endpoint is change in BMI from randomization to end-of-treatment. Ethics and dissemination: The trial has been approved by the Danish Medicines Agency (EudraCT 2019-002274-31) and by the ethical committee of the Capital Region of Denmark (H-20039422). The trial will be conducted in agreement with the Declaration of Helsinki and monitored to follow the guidelines for good clinical practice. Results will be submitted for publication in international peer-reviewed scientific journals.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

Efficacy Trial Healthy Dads, Healthy Kids for Hispanic Fathers and Children

ObesityObesity3 more

Hispanic men and children experience health disparities for overweight and obesity-related medical conditions, and therefore family level obesity prevention programs for Hispanic populations are needed. 'Healthy Dads Healthy Kids' is the first program to primarily target fathers for obesity prevention for themselves and their children, with significant and clinically relevant treatment effects. This is an efficacy trial to assess a culturally adapted 'Healthy Dads Healthy Kids' for Hispanic families.

Recruiting32 enrollment criteria

Semaglutide Effects in Obese Youth With Prediabetes/New Onset Type 2 Diabetes and Non-Alcoholic...

Type 2 Diabetes MellitusImpaired Glucose Tolerance3 more

The purpose of this study is to understand the role of GLP-1 in the pathogenesis of T2D in youth and explore their potential salutary effects and ability to delay the progressive loss of ß-cell function and reduce hepatic steatosis in youth with prediabetes/new onset T2D and NAFLD.

Recruiting33 enrollment criteria

EBT Fruit and Vegetable Prescription

Childhood ObesityObesity

Eating Better Together is a 6-month pilot program that teaches families about healthy eating and activity and provides home deliveries of fresh fruits and vegetables from a local retail partner.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Brain Activation and Satiety in Children 2

Childhood Obesity

Childhood obesity and related long-term effects are serious public health problems, but not all children with obesity do well in treatment. This study will test a new combination of family-based behavioral treatment (FBT) with a drug intervention using a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1RA) exenatide once weekly extended-release (ExQW, Bydureon®) in order to improve obesity intervention outcomes in 10-12-year-old children.

Recruiting20 enrollment criteria

A Multicenter Study for Evaluating a Digital Support System in Childhood Obesity Treatment

Childhood ObesityAdolescent Obesity2 more

Evira is a digital support system newly developed for treatment of childhood obesity. Through daily weighings at home using a special scale together with a message function in the Evira application, enabling fast and easy communication with the clinic, parents and the clinicians can easily follow the child's weight development. The purpose of this randomized controlled study is to evaluate the effect of adding Evira to the already locally used life-style treatment of childhood obesity.

Recruiting13 enrollment criteria

Pharmacokinetics and Pharmacodynamics of Topiramate for Weight Loss in Youth: PHARMATOP

ObesityChildhood

Pediatric severe obesity is the fastest growing obesity category in the United States, and anti-obesity pharmacotherapies are promising adjuncts to lifestyle modification (LSM) for the treatment of this disease. While anti-obesity pharmacotherapies have overall been associated with mean weight loss, there is substantial variability in their individual-level effectiveness. While some patients lose a significant amount of weight with anti-obesity pharmacotherapies, others lose little or even gain weight. Due to this well-recognized variability in individual-level response, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has recognized the importance of using precision medicine approaches in order to optimize treatments for pediatric severe obesity. Pharmacometrics, which uses mathematical models to study medication dose-exposure (i.e. blood drug concentrations)-response relationships, is an emerging science that can help determine optimal dosing regimens based upon patient-specific characteristics. Pharmacometrics quantitates the interplay between pharmacokinetics (PK; drug dose-exposure associations) and pharmacodynamics (PD; drug exposure-response associations). Population PK (popPK), a type of PK, can be used to quantitate variability in drug exposure among individuals in order to help inform recommendations on therapeutic individualization (e.g. through tailored dosing). In this study, investigators will use popPK/PD modeling to characterize associations between anti-obesity pharmacotherapy dose, exposure, and changes in weight and weight-related outcomes in youth with severe obesity. This study will focus on topiramate because this medication is commonly prescribed for weight loss in youth with severe obesity and has been associated with highly variable individual-level effectiveness.

Recruiting19 enrollment criteria

Holbæk Obesity Treatment (HOT) Versus Conventional Obesity Treatment (COT) in Children With Overweight...

Childhood Overweight and Obesity

The HOT versus COT trial aims to compare the effectiveness of two different lifestyle interventions for treatment of childhood overweight and obesity with the purpose of informing future clinical practice guidelines within this field. The aim is to conduct this investigation in an optimal trial design with the lowest possible risk of bias.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

Lifestyle Counseling and Medication for Adolescent Weight Management

ObesityChildhood

The prevalence of adolescent severe obesity is at an all-time high in the United States and the refractory nature of this disease has led to a serious and challenging conundrum in terms of how to provide effective, safe, scalable, and durable treatments without placing undue strain on the healthcare system. Clinical practice guidelines recommend behavioral interventions as the primary strategy for all ages and classes of obesity - moderate to severe. In 2017, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) released updated screening recommendations concluding that comprehensive, intensive behavioral interventions with a total of ≥26 contact hours over a period of 2-12 months resulted in weight loss in youth with obesity, with ≥52 contact hours leading to even greater weight loss and improvements in some cardiometabolic risk factors. However, the practicality of delivering these types of intensive behavioral services to the millions of youth with severe obesity in the U.S. is debatable not only because of the treatment-resistant nature of severe obesity, but also due to the time-commitment, acceptability, and sustainability of this approach for adolescent patients and their families along with the extensive resources required to provide these interventions. Indeed, fewer than 50% of pediatric patients referred for weight management services enroll in treatment, and high attrition rates of up to 50% have been reported in behavioral-based clinical trials and in the clinical setting. Moreover, adherence to behavioral counseling significantly diminishes over time, which too often erodes early weight loss success and ultimately derails durability. The reality of what most patients/families are able to do and the unique physiological and psychosocial features of severe obesity in adolescence do not seem to align well with the degree of intensity of behavioral interventions shown to be effective by the USPSTF. Therefore, a critical appraisal of the feasibility, effectiveness, and sustainability of the USPSTF recommendations among adolescents with severe obesity is warranted. While behavior change is an indispensable component of any effective weight loss approach, adjunctive strategies such as pharmacotherapy may enhance outcomes in adolescents with severe obesity. Many maladaptive behaviors attributed to obesity are driven by underlying biological forces, such as increased appetite and food palatability, that are largely beyond the control of the individual. Pharmacotherapy can help facilitate behavior change by disrupting core pathophysiological processes and restoring homeostasis to the energy regulatory system, therein enabling individuals to sustain healthy behavior change. Though under-explored as a treatment for adolescent obesity, pharmacotherapy along with relatively low-intensity behavioral counseling (<26 contact hours) represents a potentially effective, durable, and safe treatment strategy. This approach may be more practical and feasible to implement on a broad scale, be preferred by patients/families, utilize fewer healthcare resources, and cost less to deliver compared to comprehensive, intensive behavioral interventions.

Recruiting23 enrollment criteria
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