AI Article Synopsis

  • Skeletal muscle dysfunction contributes to sarcopenia and frailty, leading to negative health consequences like falls and increased hospital stays; thus, exploring alternatives to exercise, such as metformin, is essential for treatment.
  • The MET-PREVENT trial is a double-blind, placebo-controlled study aiming to assess the effects of metformin on physical performance in older adults with sarcopenia or pre-frailty, involving 80 participants from UK hospitals over 4 months.
  • The trial has received ethical approvals and aims to share results with participants and their healthcare providers to enhance understanding and treatment options.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Skeletal muscle dysfunction is central to both sarcopenia and physical frailty, which are associated with a wide range of adverse outcomes including falls and fractures, longer hospital stays, dependency and the need for care. Resistance training may prevent and treat sarcopenia and physical frailty, but not everyone can or wants to exercise. Finding alternatives is critical to alleviate the burden of adverse outcomes associated with sarcopenia and physical frailty. This trial will provide proof-of-concept evidence as to whether metformin can improve physical performance in older people with sarcopenia and physical prefrailty or frailty.

Methods And Analysis: MET-PREVENT is a parallel group, double-blind, placebo-controlled proof-of-concept trial. Trial participants can participate from their own homes, including completing informed consent and screening assessments. Eligible participants with low grip strength or prolonged sit-to-stand time together with slow walk speed will be randomised to either oral metformin hydrochloride 500 mg tablets or matched placebo, taken three times a day for 4 months. The recruitment target is 80 participants from two secondary care hospitals in Newcastle and Gateshead, UK. Local primary care practices will act as participant identification centres. Randomisation will be performed using a web-based minimisation system with a random element, balancing on sex and baseline walk speed. Participants will be followed up for 4 months post-randomisation, with outcomes collected at baseline and 4 months. The primary outcome measure is the four metre walk speed at the 4-month follow-up visit.

Ethics And Dissemination: The trial has been approved by the Liverpool NHS Research Ethics Committee (20/NW/0470), the Medicines and Healthcare Regulatory Authority (EudraCT 2020-004023-16) and the UK Health Research Authority (IRAS 275219). Results will be made available to participants, their families, patients with sarcopenia, the public, regional and national clinical teams, and the international scientific community.

Trial Registration Number: ISRCTN29932357.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9297211PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-061823DOI Listing

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