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Screening and Intervention for Subclinical Coronary Artery Disease in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes

NCT05700877 · Recruiting

Last updated 2026-05-28

This clinical trial is testing whether screening for hidden heart disease and early treatment in adults with type 2 diabetes can help prevent future heart problems.

Status Recruiting Currently enrolling participants.
Phase Phase 4 Monitors a drug already on the market.
Type Interventional (clinical trial)
Design Randomized, double-blind prevention study
Participants 7,300 people Planned (estimated).
Who can join Ages 55–75 · all sexes
Timeline Started 2023-01 · est. completion 2029-03
Where 1 site · Denmark

What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05700877 ↗

Description as written by the study sponsor.

The investigators intend to perform a landmark study to answer whether a combined CVD screening and treatment strategy is beneficial for patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM) without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) The investigators aim to answer the following main research questions: Do screening detected high-risk patients benefit of intensified medical treatment? Is it safe to de-intensify medical treatment among patients with a screening detected low risk of CVD? Does a CVD screening and treatment program improve patient reported health status? Cardiovascular risk remains high in patients with T2DM but unevenly distributed. Our current risk stratification strategies are far from optimal leading to both under- and over-treatment of patients. In recent years, noninvasive imaging of subclinical coronary artery disease by cardiac CT has improved considerably. This allows for easily accessible evaluations of coronary atherosclerosis burden and composition - exceptionally strong imaging biomarkers of future cardiovascular disease. An increasing amount of data suggests that cardiac CT may permit better risk stratification in patients with T2DM. At the same time, the pharmaceutical treatment of T2DM has changed with several new and expensive drug classes, each individually documented to reduce the risk for new or recurrent cardiovascular events. Thus, these new drugs may improve outcome in high-risk patients, whereas they may be wasteful and only lead to side effects in low-risk patients. In the Inten-CT study, the investigators combine these two pivotal developments. The investigators intend to improve risk stratification of patients with T2DM by use of cardiac CT and, based on this knowledge, the investigators wish to investigate if upgraded medical treatment in the high-risk population is beneficial and if de-intensified treatment in the low-risk population is safe. As a secondary aim, the investigators wish to investigate if such a strategy improves patient reported health status. These aims are in agreement with one of the important health indicators from The Danish College of General Practitioners: "We find and treat the patients and let the healthy stay healthy". The investigators intend with this strategy to improve not only cardiovascular outcome among patients with T2DM, but also their quality of life. The Inten-CT study is an investigator-initiated open-label event-driven randomized controlled trial including patients with T2DM stratified according to screen detected coronary artery calcification. The investigators expect inclusion of 7300 patients in 2 years and a mean follow-up period of 5 years.

Treatments tested

Main thing measuredRates of a composite cardiovascular endpoint
SponsorPer Løgstrup Poulsen
Conditions studiedType 2 Diabetes, Cardiovascular Diseases
GLP-1 drugs

Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05700877 ↗