The POST-ACS Study
NCT05322200 · Unknown status
Last updated 2026-05-28This study tests whether the medication semaglutide, compared to a placebo, affects plaque buildup in the heart arteries of people with diabetes who were recently hospitalized for a heart attack.
What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05322200 ↗
Description as written by the study sponsor.
Individuals with T2DM have a two-fold excess risk of cardiovascular (CV) events compared with their non-diabetic counterparts. Although it is the primary cause of death in T2DM, there is no significant evidence that intensive glucose lowering reduces CV events. Multiple Cardiovascular Outcome Trials have suggested CV safety and benefit with the new class hypoglycemic agents - glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (GLP-RAs) in patients with DM and a high CV risk profile with a mechanism not directly dependent on their glucose-lowering effect. Varies theories regarding the mechanism of action of GLP-RAs on reducing CV events have been proposed, including reducing inflammation, protection of ischemia/reperfusion injury, and improvement in endothelial dysfunction but the effects of these new agents on in-vivo atherosclerotic plaque burden is currently unproven. The investigators hypothesize that compared with placebo, 1-year treatment with the oral GLP-RA "Semaglutide" will result in a regression of necrotic core within potentially vulnerable coronary plaques (identified using the novel method "Plaque Maps" analysis on CT Coronary Angiography) in patients with raised HbA1c (\>5.7%) after acute coronary syndromes (ACS). Methods: One hundred forty patients admitted with ACS and have raised HbA1c \>5.7% will be enrolled in the trial and randomized in a 1:1 blinded fashion to receive conventional therapy and initiation of Semaglutide or conventional therapy plus placebo. All patients will have a CT Coronary Angiography with Plaque Map analysis of atherosclerotic burden, plaque composition and presence of potentially vulnerable plaque morphology at baseline prior to therapy initiation and following 12 months of treatment. In addition, to help elucidate the potential mechanisms of any anti-atherosclerotic effects, patients will have a non-invasive assessment of vascular function assessed by aortic pulse wave velocity and comprehensive biomarker analysis of inflammation, atherogenesis and oxidative stress.
Treatments tested
- A computerized tomography (CT) coronary angiogram Radiation
Participants in both arms will undergo CT coronary angiogram with Plaque Map analysis at baseline prior to therapy initiation and following 12 months of treatment.
- Vicorder (Skidmore medical, UK) Procedure
Participants in both arms will undergo aortic carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV)through the Vicorder (Skidmore medical, UK), which uses oscillometric cuff-based measurements to establish the index of arterial stiffness. The procedure will be done at baseline and 12 months after therapy initiation.
- Blood tests for inflammation and oxidative stress markers Other
All the participants will have (non-fasting) blood samples performed to assess serum glucose, lipid profile and serum biomarkers for plaque initiation (Lipid profile, LpPLA2), endothelial activation (MCP-1), plaque inflammation (hsCRP, IL6, IL18, TNF, advanced glycation end-products), vulnerable transformation (vEGF, PAI-1, BMP-6) and measures of oxidative stress (Ox-LDL, TAOS, TBARs) at baseline, and at 12 months after therapy initiation
| Main thing measured | Compare the regression of vulnerable coronary plaque (necrotic core) assessed using histologically validated "Plaque Maps" derived from CT Coronary angiography in patients with raised HbA1c admitted with ACS and treated with oral Semaglutide or placebo. |
|---|---|
| Sponsor | Swansea Bay University Health Board |
| Conditions studied | Diabetes Mellitus, Acute Coronary Syndrome, Coronary Artery Disease |
| GLP-1 drugs | — |
Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05322200 ↗