Clinical trials are scientific studies of how a new medicine or treatment works in people.
Why Participate in a Clinical Trial?
The most common answer from our bariatric surgery research participants is that they want to help others who are in their situation.
Participating in bariatric surgery clinical trials will provide more, and better, information to help:
- Patients considering bariatric surgery make their decisions.
- Clinicians to provide the best possible care for their bariatric patients.
Current Clinical Trials on Bariatric Surgery
Learn more about our bariatric surgery clinical trials to see if participating in research is a good choice for you.
Please note that additional inclusion and exclusion criteria apply. Contact the study coordinator for more details.
Triabetes Study — test to compare medical and surgical treatments for type 2 diabetes
Who can participate
Currently closed to enrollment.
Who can't participate
People who:
- Have had prior bariatric or foregut surgery.
- Currently smoke.
- Cannot exercise (walk a city block or climb a flight of stairs).
What we'll study
- The many unanswered questions about the best treatment for type 2 diabetes in patients with mild to moderate obesity.
- Whether diabetes is influenced by the type of surgery or by the amount of weight lost, or if bariatric surgery is more effective than non-surgical weight loss induced by diet and physical activity.
- The effectiveness of various bariatric surgery procedures versus an intensive behavioral intervention to induce weight loss with diet and increased physical activity.
- The feasibility of performing this type of randomized trial.
How we'll conduct the study
Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three treatment arms:
- Gastric bypass
- Gastric banding
- Structured weight loss program
Who to contact
To learn more about this study or about participating in future clinical trials, please call 412-641-3743 or email eagletoneb@upmc.edu.