Dapagliflozin Versus Metformin for the Management of Antipsychotic-Induced Weight Gain: A Pragmatic Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial

Sponsor
Sultan Qaboos University
Study ID
NCT07342764
Phase
PHASE4
Status
Not Yet Recruiting

Notify me when recruiting opens

Save your spot on the interest list for this study. We'll keep your details with this study so our team can follow up when recruiting opens.

Not yet recruiting

Add your contact details and location so we can keep your interest tied to this study.

Conditions

  • Antipsychotic-induced Weight Gain
  • Antipsychotic-induced Weight Gain (AIWG)

Eligibility Criteria

Sex
ALL
Age
16 Years - 60 Years
Healthy Volunteers
Not accepted

Interventions

  • Dapagliflozin — DRUG
    Dapagliflozin will be administered orally at a dose of 10 mg once daily. Treatment will continue for 26 weeks. Participants will be monitored for adherence, tolerability, and adverse events, including genitourinary symptoms, dehydration, sick-day events, and symptoms suggestive of ketoacidosis.
  • Metformin — DRUG
    Metformin will be administered orally. Participants will start with 500 mg twice daily, taken with meals, and will be titrated to 1000 mg twice daily by the second week as tolerated. Slower titration may be used if gastrointestinal side effects occur. Treatment will continue for the study period, with the primary endpoint assessed after 26 weeks at the maximum tolerated dose.
  • Common Lifestyle Program — OTHER
    All participants will receive a standardized common lifestyle program. This will include dietary counselling, physical activity counselling, and behavioural support delivered at baseline and reinforced during scheduled in-person visits and telephone follow-up. Physical activity will be assessed using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire.

Study Details

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether dapagliflozin can help manage weight gain caused by antipsychotic medications in people aged 16 years or older who are receiving antipsychotic treatment and have developed antipsychotic-induced weight gain. The main questions it aims to answer are: Can dapagliflozin reduce body weight as effectively and safely as metformin over the study period? How do dapagliflozin and metformin compare in their effects on body weight, body mass index, waist circumference, blood sugar, HbA1c, lipid profile, psychiatric symptoms, quality of life, medication adherence, and side effects? Researchers will compare dapagliflozin plus a common lifestyle program with metformin plus a common lifestyle program to see which treatment is more effective, better tolerated, and more acceptable for managing antipsychotic-induced weight gain. Participants will: Be randomly assigned to receive either dapagliflozin or metformin. Receive lifestyle advice, including dietary counselling, physical activity counselling, and behavioural support. Attend clinic visits at baseline, Week 12, and Week 26 for weight, waist circumference, blood tests, medication review, and other assessments. Receive telephone follow-up at Week 2, Week 6, and Week 18 to check medication adherence, side effects, tolerability, and lifestyle progress. Complete questionnaires and clinical assessments related to physical activity, quality of life, psychiatric symptoms, and treatment tolerability.

Key Dates

Start date
Sep 30, 2026
Status verified
Jun 2026
Primary completion
Nov 30, 2028
Completion
Dec 31, 2028

Study Design

Enrollment
110 participants (estimated)
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT

Arms

  • Active Comparator: Metformin
  • Experimental: Dapagliflozin

Primary Outcome Measure

Change in Body Weight [ Time Frame: Baseline, Week 12, and Week 26 at the maximum tolerated dose ]

Central Contacts