logo
Is a Year of DAPT Magical Thinking?

Is a Year of DAPT Magical Thinking?

Medscape12-05-2025
Christopher Labos, MDCM, MSc
It's hard to accept that babies born in the year 2000 now have kids of their own. It's even harder to accept that there never was much evidence for 12 months of dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) after coronary stenting.
In a recent commentary, lead author Marco Valgimigli, MD, PhD, likened the routine use of 1 year of DAPT to a myth that has become entrenched in our collective culture. Though recent trials suggest shorter durations are feasible and possibly better, untangling truth from myth is proving to be a Gordian knot.
Enter the DAPT Era
The era of DAPT began with the publication of the CURE study in 2001. Patients with non-ST elevation myocardial infarction were randomized to aspirin plus clopidogrel or aspirin plus placebo. Despite the increased bleeding seen with the addition of clopidogrel, the trial's positive primary outcome prompted many, myself included, to start putting patients on both drugs.
As more potent anti-platelets such as prasugrel and ticagrelor came to market, on the basis of TRITON-TIMI 38 and PLATO , respectively, the idea of yearlong double therapy was reinforced. But in TRITON-TIMI 38, median treatment duration was 14.5 months and in PLATO it was just over 9 months. Neither study provided 12 months of DAPT nor tested a specific duration of therapy.
The subject grew more complicated as the field evolved. Bare metal stents improved and then gave way to drug eluting stents which in turn evolved to newer iterations with better scaffolds, polymers, and anti-proliferative agents. In the early 2000's, the risk of stent thrombosis with the first generation of drug-eluting stents prompted a science advisory stressing the importance of 12 months of DAPT. Even though the risk of late stent thrombosis is much reduced with the newer generation of drug eluting stents, a confluence of factors made 12 months of DAPT the standard of care.
But a blanket 1-year recommendation ignores the past quarter century's dizzying evolution in stents, angiography techniques, and background medical therapy. We can justifiably question if studies from 20 or even 10 years ago are still relevant and if the particular risk and medication profile of the patient sitting in front of you has been adequately represented in the clinical trials.
Balancing Ischemic Benefit and Bleeding Risk
Multiple trials have tested alternatives to 12 months of DAPT. The DAPT trial tested 12 months vs 30 months of DAPT and found fewer stent thromboses and cardiovascular events with longer treatment but at the cost of more bleeding. This trade-off has been replicated many times and a meta-analysis of five trials of longer term DAPT showed that extending treatment beyond 12 months reduced cardiovascular events but resulted in more bleeds.
This balance between cardiovascular benefit and bleeding risk prompted the question of shorter durations than 12 months. A summary of this body of evidence suggests that 3-6 months had no major impact on either stent thrombosis and paradoxically bleeding risk compared with 12 months.
While those de-escalation trials usually left patients on aspirin alone, an alternative would be to stop the aspirin and leave them on a P2Y12 inhibitor.
Multiple trials have tested a variety of permutations. The SMART-CHOICE trial de-escalated to clopidogrel in most patients after 3 months of DAPT, STOPDAPT-2 de-escalated to clopidogrel after 1 month of DAPT, while TWILIGHT tested ticagrelor monotherapy after 3 months of DAPT in a high-risk population. Keeping this heterogeneity in mind, meta-analyzing these trials suggests that ticagrelor alone after 1-3 months of DAPT reduces the bleeding risk without increasing cardiovascular events. Whether we can say the same for prasugrel is less clear. The STOPDAPT-3 trial tried an 'aspirin free' strategy with prasugrel monotherapy at 3.75 mg daily rather than the standard 10 mg dose. This strategy did not improve bleeding rates or worsen the primary endpoint, suggesting that prasugrel monotherapy may be feasible. But the atypical dosing and general unpopularity of prasugrel does make it a challenging trial to put into practice.
But Wait There's More De-escalation Trials
At the recent American College of Cardiology scientific sessions in Chicago, there were even more data to add to the mix. The HOST-BR trial tested two different regimens based on the patient's bleeding risk. High risk patients were randomized to 1 vs 3 months of DAPT and low risk patients were randomized to 3 vs 12 months, with clopidogrel being the most common second anti-platelet. In high bleeding risk patients, limiting DAPT to 1 month increased major adverse cardiac and cerebral events (MAACE) at 1 year by 4.0% on the absolute scale with a non-significant trend towards less bleeding. By contrast, in the low-bleeding-risk patients, limiting DAPT to 3 months instead of 1 year had no major effect on MAACE but reduced bleeding by 9.5% on the absolute scale. In both the high and low risk patients, 3 months of DAPT seemed to be the sweet spot.
SMART-CHOICE 3 took a different tack and evaluated patients that had already completed their 'standard' duration DAPT (12 months post myocardial infarction and 6 months overwise) and randomized them to monotherapy with aspirin vs clopidogrel. At 3 years, clopidogrel reduced MAACE by 2.2% with no effect on bleeding.
Both of these Korean trials were open label studies. In East Asian populations, differences in bleeding risk suggest that clopidogrel might be superior to ticagrelor, hence the decision to use it in the study. However, in other ethnic groups the same might not hold true, and whether the results would replicate with ticagrelor is anyone's guess.
Guidelines Nudge but Don't Fully Budge
Depending on your point of view, the accumulated data is either dizzyingly complex and impossible to parse through or too limited to make any firm recommendations. Admittedly, we have to consider not just length of DAPT but also which anti-platelets to use as monotherapy and the clinical context of the patient. A high-ischemic-risk cardiac patient at low bleeding risk is very different from a high bleeding risk patient going for an elective PCI (percutaneous coronary intervention). We shouldn't blithely assume that what's true for clopidogrel is true for ticagrelor or that one antiplatelet is universally better in all populations. Also, most trials fail to consider one important consideration: cost.
Given all the new data from the last few years, you might think that clinical guidelines have evolved to incorporate or at least acknowledge the growing equipoise of how and when to inhibit platelets in cardiac patients. But the recent 2025 ACS guidelines still suggest a minimum 12 months of DAPT and give it a class 1A indication if the patient isn't at high bleeding risk. If they are, bleeding reduction strategies include transitioning to ticagrelor monotherapy after 1 month (Class 1A) and switching from ticagrelor or prasugrel to clopidogrel as part of the DAPT regimen (Class 2B). Monotherapy with any agent after 1 month also gets a 2b recommendation.
Although the guidelines are starting to budge on the issue, we seem to be perpetually locked into a 12-month DAPT mindset. The why is a fascinating question. It's partly because we are often more tolerant of bleeding than of cardiovascular events. We think we can manage bleeds whereas a stent thrombosis or a recurrent myocardial infarction feels like a failure.
Who follows up on the patient will also affect the duration of antiplatelet therapy. It's asking a lot of primary care providers to overrule the angiographer's recommendation of 12 months of DAPT post stent on the cath report.
A combination of uncertainty and inertia is keeping 12 months of DAPT alive. I'm as guilty as everyone else of falling into long established patterns. Habits are hard to break, but 24 years after CURE, we should acknowledge that 1 year of DAPT was never shown to be clinically superior to any other interval. Most of the contemporary data suggests that shorter durations are just as good if not better.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inventiva names Jason Campagna as President of R&D and Chief Medical Officer and Martine Zimmermann as Executive Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance
Inventiva names Jason Campagna as President of R&D and Chief Medical Officer and Martine Zimmermann as Executive Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Inventiva names Jason Campagna as President of R&D and Chief Medical Officer and Martine Zimmermann as Executive Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance

Jason Campagna, MD, PhD, joins Inventiva as President of R&D and Chief Medical Officer, succeeding Pierre Broqua, PhD, and Michael Cooreman, MD Martine Zimmermann, PharmD, joins as Executive Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance These key leadership appointments underscore Inventiva's commitment to long-term growth and operational excellence, with topline results from NATiV3 on track for the second half of 2026 Daix (France), New York City (New York, United States), July 9, 2025 – Inventiva (Euronext Paris and Nasdaq: IVA) ('Inventiva' or the 'Company'), a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the development of oral therapies for the treatment of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis ('MASH'), today announced a leadership transition with the appointment of Jason Campagna, MD, PhD, as President of Research and Development ('R&D') and Chief Medical Officer ('CMO') and Martine Zimmermann, PharmD, as Executive Vice President ('EVP') of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance. Dr. Campagna is joining Inventiva's executive leadership team and brings extensive expertise in the MASH field. He succeeds Pierre Broqua, PhD, co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer, who is transitioning to a consulting role as Scientific Advisor, and Michael Cooreman, MD, departing as CMO of the Company. Dr. Campagna most recently was the CMO at Q32 Bio and prior to that was the MASH Global Program Lead and CMO at Intercept Pharmaceuticals. Dr. Zimmermann is also joining the Company's executive leadership team. She was most recently Senior Vice President, Head of Regulatory Affairs at Ipsen where she successfully led a team that secured regulatory approvals of two liver disease drugs, including Iqirvo®, a dual PPARα/δ agonist, for the treatment of primary biliary cholangitis. Prior to Ipsen, Dr. Zimmermann was Senior Vice President and Head of Global Regulatory Affairs & Quality at Alexion Pharma (also known as AstraZeneca Rare Disease). Frederic Cren, CEO of Inventiva stated: 'Jason and Martine both bring exceptional leadership and experience during this pivotal time for the Company as we plan for the readout of our NATiV3 Phase 3 study next year and lanifibranor's potential regulatory approval and commercialization. Having played an integral part in the creation and building of Inventiva, Pierre will continue to actively support the team in a scientific consulting role. I would also like to express my gratitude to Michael for his scientific leadership and contributions in advancing lanifibranor to this stage and we wish him every success in his future endeavors.' Jason Campagna, MD, PhD, President, R&D and CMO of Inventiva commented: 'Inventiva has built a robust scientific and clinical foundation, and I'm thrilled to join the team at this pivotal moment as we advance lanifibranor toward anticipated regulatory submissions. Having led the design and execution of one of the field's most advanced clinical programs at Intercept—including the first-ever NDA submission in this indication—I've seen firsthand both the scientific complexity and the urgency of bringing effective therapies to patients with MASH. I believe the promising results of the Phase 2b NATIVE trial reflect the thoughtful design of lanifibranor development program—and that's deeply exciting to me. With lanifibranor well on its way in the Phase 3 NATiV3 registrational trial, I look forward to working closely with the exceptional team at Inventiva to deliver on the promise of bringing a novel treatment to patients with MASH.' Martine Zimmermann, PharmD, Executive Vice President of Regulatory Affairs and Quality Assurance of Inventiva said: "I'm excited to take on this leadership role at a time when Inventiva is entering a critical regulatory phase for lanifibranor, a first-in-class pan-PPAR agonist for the treatment of MASH. In my career, I've been closely involved in leading global regulatory strategy and approval of compounds for the treatment of chronic liver diseases, including a PPAR, in a number of geographies, including the US, Europe and Japan. I am now eager to apply that experience to support lanifibranor toward a potential approval." About Inventiva Inventiva is a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company focused on the research and development of oral small molecule therapies for the treatment of patients with MASH and other diseases with significant unmet medical need. The Company is currently evaluating lanifibranor, a novel pan-PPAR agonist, in the NATiV3 pivotal Phase 3 clinical trial for the treatment of adult patients with MASH, a common and progressive chronic liver disease. Inventiva is a public company listed on compartment B of the regulated market of Euronext Paris (ticker: IVA, ISIN: FR0013233012) and on the Nasdaq Global Market in the United States (ticker: IVA). Contacts InventivaPascaline ClercEVP, Strategy and Corporate Affairsmedia@ 202 499 8937 ICR HealthcareMedia relations Alexis Feinberg inventivapr@ +1 203 939 2225 ICR HealthcarePatricia L. BankInvestor relations +1 415 513 1284 Important Notice This press release contains certain 'forward-looking statements' within the meaning of the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. All statements, other than statements of historical facts, included in this press release are forward-looking statements. These statements include, but are not limited to, Inventiva's clinical trials, including Inventiva's ongoing NATiV3 Phase 3 clinical trial of lanifibranor in MASH, including related timing and regulatory matters with respect thereto, clinical trial data releases and publications, the information, insights and impacts that may be gathered from clinical trials, the potential therapeutic benefits of Inventiva's product candidates, potential regulatory submissions, approvals and commercialization, the effective start date of Dr. Campagna and Mrs. Zimmerman, the clinical development of and regulatory plans and pathway for lanifibranor, and future activities, expectations, plans, growth and prospects of Inventiva. Certain of these statements, forecasts and estimates can be recognized by the use of words such as, without limitation, 'believes', 'anticipates', 'expects', 'intends', 'plans', 'seeks', 'estimates', 'may', 'will', 'would', 'could', 'might', 'should', 'designed', 'hopefully', 'target', 'potential', 'possible', 'aim', and 'continue' and similar expressions. Such statements are not historical facts but rather are statements of future expectations and other forward-looking statements that are based on management's beliefs. These statements reflect such views and assumptions prevailing as of the date of the statements and involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause future results, performance, or future events to differ materially from those expressed or implied in such statements. Actual events are difficult to predict and may depend upon factors that are beyond Inventiva's control. There can be no guarantees with respect to product candidates that the clinical trial results will be available on their anticipated timeline, that future clinical trials will be initiated as anticipated, that product candidates will receive the necessary regulatory approvals, or that any of the anticipated milestones by Inventiva or its partners will be reached on their expected timeline, or at all. Future results may turn out to be materially different from the anticipated future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such statements, forecasts and estimates due to a number of factors, including that interim data or data from any interim analysis of ongoing clinical trials may not be predictive of future trial results, the recommendation of the DMC may not be indicative of a potential marketing approval, Inventiva cannot provide assurance on the impacts of the Suspected Unexpected Serious Adverse Reaction on the results or timing of the NATiV3 trial or regulatory matters with respect thereto, that Inventiva is a clinical-stage company with no approved products and no historical product revenues, Inventiva has incurred significant losses since inception, Inventiva has never generated any revenue from product sales, Inventiva will require additional capital to finance its operations, in the absence of which, Inventiva may be required to significantly curtail, delay or discontinue one or more of its research or development programs or be unable to expand its operations or otherwise capitalize on its business opportunities and may be unable to continue as a going concern, Inventiva's ability to obtain financing, to enter into potential transactions, Inventiva's future success is dependent on the successful clinical development, regulatory approval and subsequent commercialization of lanifibranor, preclinical studies or earlier clinical trials are not necessarily predictive of future results and the results of Inventiva's and its partners' clinical trials may not support Inventiva's and its partners' product candidate claims, Inventiva's expectations with respect to its clinical trials may prove to be wrong and regulatory authorities may require additional holds and/or amendments to Inventiva's clinical trials, Inventiva's expectations with respect to the clinical development plan for lanifibranor for the treatment of MASH may not be realized and may not support the approval of a New Drug Application, Inventiva's ability to identify additional products or product candidates with significant commercial potential, Inventiva's expectations with respect to its pipeline prioritization plan and related workforce reduction, including whether the plan will be implemented and the timing, potential benefits, expenses and consequences relating thereto, Inventiva's ability to execute on its commercialization, marketing and manufacturing capabilities and strategy, Inventiva's ability to successfully cooperate with existing partners or enter into new partnerships, and to fulfill its obligations under any agreements entered into in connection with such partnerships, the benefits of its existing and future partnerships on the clinical development, regulatory approvals and, if approved, commercialization of its product candidates, and the achievement of milestones thereunder and the timing thereof, Inventiva and its partners may encounter substantial delays beyond expectations in their clinical trials or fail to demonstrate safety and efficacy to the satisfaction of applicable regulatory authorities, the ability of Inventiva and its partners to recruit and retain patients in clinical studies, enrollment and retention of patients in clinical trials is an expensive and time-consuming process and could be made more difficult or rendered impossible by multiple factors outside Inventiva's and its partners' control, Inventiva's product candidates may cause adverse drug reactions or have other properties that could delay or prevent their regulatory approval, or limit their commercial potential, Inventiva faces substantial competition and Inventiva's and its partners' business, and pre-clinical studies and clinical development programs and timelines, its financial condition and results of operations could be materially and adversely affected by changes in law and regulations, unfavorable conditions in its industry, geopolitical events, such as the conflict between Russia and Ukraine and related sanctions, the conflict in the Middle East and the related risk of a larger conflict, health epidemics, and macroeconomic conditions, including developments in international trade policies, global inflation, financial and credit market fluctuations, tariffs and other trade barriers, political turmoil and natural catastrophes, uncertain financial markets and disruptions in banking systems. The review of potential financial and strategic options may not result in any particular action or transaction being pursued, entered into or consummated, and there is no assurance as to the timing, sequence or outcome of any action or transaction or series of actions or transactions. Given these risks and uncertainties, no representations are made as to the accuracy or fairness of such forward-looking statements, forecasts, and estimates. Furthermore, forward-looking statements, forecasts and estimates only speak as of the date of this press release. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any of these forward-looking statements. Please refer to the Universal Registration Document for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the Autorité des Marchés Financiers on April 15, 2025, and the Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the 'SEC') on April 15, 2025 for other risks and uncertainties affecting Inventiva, including those described under the caption 'Risk Factors' and in future filings with the SEC. Other risks and uncertainties of which Inventiva is not currently aware may also affect its forward-looking statements and may cause actual results and the timing of events to differ materially from those anticipated. All information in this press release is as of the date of the release. Except as required by law, Inventiva has no intention and is under no obligation to update or review the forward-looking statements referred to above. Consequently, Inventiva accepts no liability for any consequences arising from the use of any of the above statements. Attachment Inventiva - PR - Leadership Team Changes- EN - 07 09 2025Sign in to access your portfolio

Is Novo Nordisk Increasing Dosage to Defend Wegovy's Edge in Obesity?
Is Novo Nordisk Increasing Dosage to Defend Wegovy's Edge in Obesity?

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Is Novo Nordisk Increasing Dosage to Defend Wegovy's Edge in Obesity?

Novo Nordisk NVO announced that it has submitted a regulatory application to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) seeking approval for a new and higher dose of its popular obesity medication, Wegovy (subcutaneous semaglutide 7.2 mg). Wegovy is also indicated for major adverse cardiovascular events risk reduction, improvements in HFpEF-related symptoms and physical function, as well as pain reduction related to knee osteoarthritis. Novo Nordisk also markets semaglutide as Ozempic injection and Rybelsus oral tablet for type II diabetes (T2D). The EMA submission is backed by data from the STEP UP and STEP UP T2D studies, which evaluated semaglutide 7.2 mg in obese adult patients, with and without T2D. In the STEP UP study, the higher dose of Wegovy led to an average weight loss of 21%, with one-third of participants shedding at least 25% of their body weight compared with placebo. The 7.2 mg dose was well-tolerated and demonstrated a favorable safety profile, aligning with that of the 2.4 mg dose and previous semaglutide studies. Novo Nordisk submitted the 7.2 mg dose of Wegovy to offer a tailored option for people with obesity who need greater weight loss support. It is designed to enhance both weight reduction and related health outcomes, such as cardiovascular and kidney function, liver disease, T2D and mobility issues linked to knee osteoarthritis. Backed by a reaffirmed safety and tolerability profile, the company believes the new dose has strong potential to benefit a broader patient population, thereby expanding its reach. Novo Nordisk also plans to submit the Wegovy 7.2 mg dose for the obesity indication across several other geographies. Eli Lilly LLY is NVO's fierce competitor in the obesity space, which markets its tirzepatide medicines as Mounjaro for T2D and Zepbound for obesity. NVO's latest EMA submission for the Wegovy 7.2 mg dose is also to tackle the increasing competition from LLY's Zepbound. Lilly's Zepbound had earlier outperformed Novo Nordisk's Wegovy (20.2% compared with 13.7%, respectively) in a weight-loss head-to-head study. Despite being on the market for less than three years, Lilly's Mounjaro and Zepbound have witnessed strong sales driven by rapid demand. Several other companies, like Viking Therapeutics VKTX, are also making rapid progress in the development of GLP-1-based candidates in their clinical pipeline. Viking Therapeutics' dual GIPR/GLP-1 receptor agonist, VK2735, is being developed both as oral and subcutaneous formulations for the treatment of obesity. Recently, Viking Therapeutics initiated a late-stage program (VANQUISH), comprising two phase III studies evaluating the subcutaneous version of VK2735 in obesity and T2D patients. VKTX had also initiated a mid-stage study (VENTURE) on the oral formulation of the candidate earlier this year. Year to date, Novo Nordisk shares have lost 19% compared with the industry's 1.2% decline. The company has also underperformed the sector and the S&P 500 during the same time frame, as seen in the chart below. Image Source: Zacks Investment Research Novo Nordisk is trading at a premium to the industry, as seen in the chart below. Going by the price/earnings ratio, the company's shares currently trade at 16.33 forward earnings, which is higher than 14.93 for the industry. However, the stock is trading much below its five-year mean of 29.25. Image Source: Zacks Investment Research Earnings estimates for 2025 have improved from $3.89 to $3.93 per share over the past 60 days. During the same time frame, Novo Nordisk's 2026 earnings per share estimates have decreased from $4.70 to $4.58. Image Source: Zacks Investment Research The stock's return on equity on a trailing 12-month basis is 80.95%, which is higher than 33.55% for the large drugmaker industry, as seen in the chart below. Image Source: Zacks Investment Research Novo Nordisk currently carries a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold). You can see the complete list of today's Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here. Want the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report Novo Nordisk A/S (NVO) : Free Stock Analysis Report Eli Lilly and Company (LLY) : Free Stock Analysis Report Viking Therapeutics, Inc. (VKTX) : Free Stock Analysis Report This article originally published on Zacks Investment Research ( Zacks Investment Research

Losing weight has ‘hidden benefits' and clears out damaged cells
Losing weight has ‘hidden benefits' and clears out damaged cells

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Losing weight has ‘hidden benefits' and clears out damaged cells

Losing excess weight has 'hidden benefits' and helps clear out damaged and ageing cells, scientists have discovered. They examined hundreds of thousands of cells to produce the first very detailed analysis of the changes weight loss causes in human fat tissue. Numerous benefits of losing weight were identified, including the clearing out of damaged, ageing cells, and increased metabolism of harmful fats. The findings could, in future, help in the development of therapies for diseases such as type 2 diabetes, the team said. The study, published in the journal Nature, compared samples of fat tissue from people with a healthy weight with samples from people with severe obesity (BMI over 35) undergoing bariatric weight loss surgery. The weight loss group had fat samples taken during surgery and more than five months afterwards, at which point they had lost an average of 25kg. Researchers from the Medical Research Council (MRC) Laboratory of Medical Sciences in London, and from Imperial College London, analysed gene expression in more than 170,000 cells that made up the fat tissue samples, from 70 people. They discovered that weight loss triggers the breakdown and recycling of fats called lipids. This recycling process could be responsible for burning energy and reversing the harmful build-up of lipids in other organs like the liver and pancreas, they said. Further research is now needed to work out if lipid recycling is linked to the positive effects of weight loss on health, such as remission of type 2 diabetes. Scientists also found that the weight loss cleared out senescent cells, which are ageing and damaged cells that accumulate in all tissues. These cells no longer function properly and release signals that lead to tissue inflammation and scarring. Dr William Scott, who led the study, said: 'We've known for a long time that weight loss is one of the best ways to treat the complications of obesity, such as diabetes, but we haven't fully understood why. 'This study provides a detailed map of what may actually be driving some of these health benefits at a tissue and cellular level. 'Fat tissues have many under-appreciated health impacts, including on blood sugar levels, body temperature, hormones that control appetite, and even reproductive health. 'We hope that new information from studies like ours will start to pave the way for developing better treatments for diabetes and other health problems caused by excess body fat.' Researchers found that weight loss did not, however, improve the effects of obesity on some aspects of the immune system. Inflammatory immune cells, for example, did not fully recover even after weight loss. Experts said this type of inflammatory cell memory could be harmful in the long term if people regain weight. The study was funded by the Medical Research Council, Diabetes UK and Wellcome. Dr Faye Riley, research communications lead at Diabetes UK, said: 'For some people, losing weight can put their type 2 diabetes into remission. 'But weight loss is challenging, and current approaches don't work for everyone. 'This research offers a rare window into the changes that occur in fat tissue during weight loss that may be key to improving health and putting type 2 diabetes into remission. 'By deepening our understanding of these processes, the study could open the door to innovative therapies that mimic the effects of weight loss, potentially helping people with type 2 diabetes to manage their condition or go into remission.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store