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Phase 2 N=67 Randomized Quadruple-blind Prevention

Mechanistic Approach to Preventing Atrophy and Restoring Function in Older Adults

Muscle Atrophy · Quality of Life

Enrolled (actual)
67
Serious AEs
9.0%
Results posted
Jul 2024
Primary outcome: Primary: MRI Quadriceps Involved Leg — 43.87; 38.31 AU — p=.03

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
Phase 2
Interventions
Essential Amino Acids (EAA) (Drug); Placebo (Alanine) (Drug)
Age
Adult, Older Adult · 50+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
University of Oregon
Primary completion
Feb 2020

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
MRI Quadriceps Involved Leg
43.87; 38.31 .03 sig
PRIMARY
MRI Quadriceps Contralateral Leg
54.41; 46.44 .01 sig
PRIMARY
MRI Hamstrings Involved Leg
63.76; 55.93 .04 sig
PRIMARY
MRI Hamstrings Contralateral Leg
67.50; 58.75 .01 sig
SECONDARY
Daily Physical Activity
265.67; 196.54 .12
SECONDARY
Handgrip Strength
30.74; 28.03 .03 sig
SECONDARY
Short Physical Performance Battery
3.95; 3.90 .71
SECONDARY
Timed Up and Go
9.87; 10.90 .76
SECONDARY
4-Meter Walk
3.89; 3.90 .40
SECONDARY
Stair Climb Up
7.95; 8.64 .97
SECONDARY
Stair Climb Down
8.12; 9.53 .89
SECONDARY
6-Minute Walk
464.56; 477.02 .48
SECONDARY
KOOS Symptoms
68.80; 56.99 .02 sig
SECONDARY
KOOS Pain
68.71; 64.77 .29
SECONDARY
KOOS Function Daily Living
81.41; 76.16 .33
SECONDARY
KOOS Function Sports/Recreation
44.21; 37.90 .30
SECONDARY
KOOS Knee-Related Quality of Life
51.74; 50.33 .98
SECONDARY
PHQ-9
4.68; 3.68 .18
SECONDARY
PCS12
37.55; 35.48 .52
SECONDARY
MCS12
52.11; 54.76 .81

Summary

As a function of the growing population of older adults, an estimated 3.48 million total knee arthroplasty (TKA) procedures will be performed annually in the U.S. by 2030. Despite the near-universal success of this surgery in mitigating chronic knee pain, TKA is not successful in restoring long-term physical function in older adults, primarily because of quadriceps muscle atrophy, which explains 77% of the strength deficits. Overall, strength and functional mobility in TKA patients is 30-50% below age-matched healthy controls. Functional tasks such as stair-climbing remain a clinical problem for 75% of patients following TKA. Muscle atrophy occurs in both operative and non-operative legs, and is essentially permanent for older patients because of their impaired ability to increase muscle mass. The purpose of this clinical research is to determine the effects of essential amino acid (EAA) supplementation on muscle mass, strength, and functional mobility following TKA in older adults. Based on strong preliminary data, the investigators hypothesize that twice-daily ingestion of 23 g of EAA for 1 wk before through 6 wk after TKA will increase basal rates of muscle protein synthesis via inactivation of catabolic signaling, and up-regulation of anabolic and cyto-protective proteins. The investigators further hypothesize that short-term atrophy prevention and accelerated return of functional mobility will lead to longer-term structural and functional adaptations, and improved quality of life in older TKA patients vs. Placebo. Identifying the mechanisms up-regulated by EAA treatment that preserve muscle volume and mobility will have a major impact on rehabilitation science. This study will accomplish two specific aims: (1) determine if EAA elevates basal rates of muscle protein synthesis by up-regulating anabolic pathways and cyto-protective proteins, and inactivating catabolic pathways in the short term vs. Placebo and (2) determine if short-term prevention of atrophy, weakness, and functional mobility leads to positive changes in muscle cell structure and function, and improved quality of life in the longer term vs. Placebo. This work is significant because it advances knowledge of the molecular and cellular changes occurring during muscle atrophy (Placebo) and atrophy prevention (EAA) in a clinical setting using a treatment that is broadly applicable, is well tolerated, and can be implemented immediately.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Age: between 50-80 years.
  • Primary TKA surgery.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Previous TKA and/or total hip arthroplasty surgery (older subjects).
  • Dementia or related mental issues that may potentially put the subject at risk as determined by the surgeon.
  • Untreated endocrine disease (Hypo/Hyperthyroidism, Addison's or Cushing's syndrome, etc.).
  • Significant heart, liver, kidney, blood, or respiratory disease.
  • Peripheral vascular disease.
  • Active cancer.
  • Recent (within 6 months) treatment with anabolic steroids.
  • Alcohol or drug abuse.
  • Inability to have MRI
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02145949). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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