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Metformin for Antipsychotic-induced Weight Gain in Adults With Intellectual Disability
Sponsor: Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Summary
People with IDD (intellectual and developmental disability) have very high rates of obesity and die prematurely from cardiometabolic disease. While antipsychotics contribute to this problem, their use is necessary and appropriate in a significant subgroup of individuals with IDD. Exercise and diet interventions have limitations and may not be sufficient, requiring effective adjunctive pharmacological approaches to target obesity and related comorbidities in IDD. However, persons with IDD treated with antipsychotics are systematically excluded from clinical trials hindering development of evidence to help guide safe and effective treatment of these comorbidities. Moreover, evidence from other disorders cannot be extrapolated to IDD given inherent biological differences between disorders. This trial will address the identified gaps, which extend beyond cardiovascular morbidity and negatively impact psychosocial outcomes, in a hugely underserviced population.This is the the first RCT (randomized control trial) to examine the efficacy of metformin in overweight or obese adults with IDD who have experienced antipsychotic-induced weight gain. By generating efficacy data for a very accessible and scalable intervention, allows for guideline and implementation strategies to address a recalcitrant health problem.
Official title: Metformin for Antipsychotic-induced Weight Gain in Adults With Intellectual Disability: A Double-Blind Randomized Control Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - 65 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
100
Start Date
2023-02-28
Completion Date
2027-03-01
Last Updated
2026-03-31
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Metformin
Metformin oral, 2000mg/day, for 24 weeks.
Placebo
Oral placebo for 24 weeks
Lifestyle Intervention
Participants from both groups will meet a dietician and a diabetes educator at the study start to obtain advice regarding healthy diet, portion size, and meal planning to improve physical health. All participants will be invited to monthly group meetings to learn skills which will help them in a variety of wellness areas such as physical exercises and diet. Attendance in these sessions will be encouraged but not mandatory, and attendance will be recorded. Fidelity with these interventions will be captured using diet and physical activity questionnaires at RCT start, midpoint and end, and end of open label phase.
Locations (1)
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Toronto, Ontario, Canada