Circulation. 2025 Dec 18.
Moritz J Hundertmark,
Sarah M Birkhoelzer,
Clara Portwood,
Adrienne G Siu,
Violet Matthews,
Andrew J Lewis,
James Grist,
Ferenc Mózes,
John A Henry,
Jai Patel,
Paul Chamberlin,
Rizwan Sarwar,
Arash Yavari,
Hakim-Moulay Dehbi,
Prashant Rao,
Xu Shi,
Shuning Zheng,
Jeremy M Robbins,
Robert E Gerszten,
Michael P Frenneaux,
Ladislav Valkovič,
Jack J J J Miller,
Stefan Neubauer,
Damian J Tyler,
Oliver J Rider.
BACKGROUND: We report IMPROVE-DiCE (Improve Diabetic Cardiac Energetics), a 2-part open-label, phase 2a trial evaluating the safety and effectiveness of ninerafaxstat, a novel therapeutic designed to enhance cardiac energetics. Between May and September 2021, part 1 enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes and obesity without heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Between January 2023 and June 2024, part 2 enrolled patients with type 2 diabetes, obesity, and HFpEF.
METHODS: Forty-two participants received 200 mg ninerafaxstat twice daily (part 1, n=21, 43% women, 72±0.5 years of age, 4-8 weeks; part 2, n=21, 29% women, 71±6 years of age, 12 weeks). Myocardial energetics (phosphocreatine-to-ATP ratio [PCr/ATP], primary outcome) and function (rest and dobutamine stress) were assessed before and after treatment using magnetic resonance imaging, 31P- and 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy. In part 1, hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate magnetic resonance spectroscopy to assess in vivo pyruvate dehydrogenase flux (n=9) and plasma metabolomics and proteomics were also performed.
RESULTS: In part 1, in patients with diabetes and obesity but without HFpEF, the heart was characterized by impaired pyruvate dehydrogenase flux, reduced PCr/ATP, triglyceride deposition, and diastolic impairment. Treatment with ninerafaxstat was associated with improved PCr/ATP (+0.39±0.49 [95% CI, 0.16-0.62]; Cohen's d, 0.79; P=0.002) and lower myocardial triglyceride (by 34%, P=0.03). In part 2, in patients with diabetes, obesity, and symptomatic HFpEF, the heart was characterized by reduced PCr/ATP, diastolic impairment, and failure of systolic augmentation to exercise. Consistently, treatment with ninerafaxstat was associated with improvement in PCr/ATP (+0.15±0.25 [95% CI, 0.03-0.26]; Cohen's d, 0.60; P=0.02), improved systolic augmentation to exercise (+1.4 L/min, P=0.04), improved exercise capacity (6-minute walk distance +16 m, P=0.02), and improved New York Heart Association class symptom burden.
CONCLUSIONS: These mechanistic phase 2a study results show that ninerafaxstat is safely tolerated and improves myocardial energetics in participants with obesity and diabetes without or with clinically manifest HFpEF.
REGISTRATION: URL: https://clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04826159.
Keywords: HFpEF; cardiac energy metabolism; diabetic cardiomyopathy; hyperpolarized MR; magnetic resonance imaging; obesity