Eddy Edson
Well-Known Member
- Relationship to Diabetes
- Type 2
The “Clinical Trial Service Unit and Epidemiological Studies Unit” “at” the University of Oxford are conducting a trial of oral semaglutide where approximately 20,000 Type 2 diabetics over 55 years old without any record of heart or circulatory problems, such as heart attacks or strokes, are offered this drug but half will receive a placebo. The trial is called “AscendPlus”.
An earlier trial called Ascend handed out aspirins to a lot of people but this study was inconclusive.
Semaglutide is widely used in weight loss treatment when any improvement in heart or circulatory conditions would be apparent? Or ought to happen in any event due to weight loss.
NICE offer this indications and dose advice for semaglutide:
Type 2 diabetes mellitus as monotherapy (if metformin inappropriate), or in combination with other antidiabetic drugs (including insulin) if existing treatment fails to achieve adequate glycaemic control.
A friend who should know about these thing described Oxford health care as “greedy b***ards”.
The only medical input was to scan the medical files of those who granted the NHS permission to do so many years ago and extract those who fulfilled the criteria. There are some nasty side effects which are being ignored in a trial of this size; if they’re not and it’s not clear that it is then there will be a considerable effort required to further screen all 20,000. That will divert resources away? And it isn’t a question of undercutting anybody. It is supply and demand. This is where the greed arises.Still not sure how testing a drug at a university, (and there is a second trial ongoing in association with dementia) has any effect on the NHS waiting list, or why a surgeon in Oxford should be forced to undercut a surgeon in London?
It is better to outsource trials to an independent facility in a University, in house trials would be considered biased.
The original study lasted a year and followed with unanimous approval for the drug.I see the Primary Completion date for the study is August 2028, and the Final Completion date is 2048. Hardly making a fast buck!
The only medical input was to scan the medical files of those who granted the NHS permission to do so many years ago and extract those who fulfilled the criteria. There are some nasty side effects which are being ignored in a trial of this size; if they’re not and it’s not clear that it is then there will be a considerable effort required to further screen all 20,000. That will divert resources away? And it isn’t a question of undercutting anybody. It is supply and demand. This is where the greed arises.
I find it fascinating that some people seem to think that Pharma companies exist for the good of humanity.
They exist to make a profit and that is their primary objective. They are happy to treat symptoms instead of root causes and have no shame in exaggerating the benefits of their products.
Novo Nordisk have made billions from insulin after Banting gave away the rights to its production for $1 to aid humanity...
Weight loss from their drug appears to be temporary and once you come off it the weight comes back...
A customer cured is a customer lost..
@bulkbiker, @travellor. Hope you guys are not off down another rabbit hole where arguing about the extremities of an issue looses sight of the centre ground.
True. That's the way things usually work with meds for chronic conditions.once you come off it the weight comes back...
That's why dietary changes are both more effective and easier long term.True. That's the way things usually work with meds for chronic conditions.
Curiously, I just got an invitation for that. Maybe they don't have permissions to search for people with specific type of diabetes or something? Regardless, it is for people with Type 2 which I don't have, so there's been some kind of mixup.The trial is called “AscendPlus”.