Actively Recruiting

Phase Not Applicable
Age: 50Years - 90Years
MALE
Healthy Volunteers
NCT05414292

Impacts of Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) Inhibition on Aged Human Muscle (Rapamune)

Led by University of Nottingham · Updated on 2025-04-10

16

Participants Needed

1

Research Sites

299 weeks

Total Duration

On this page

Sponsors

U

University of Nottingham

Lead Sponsor

U

University of Oxford

Collaborating Sponsor

AI-Summary

What this Trial Is About

As people age, muscle mass and function is lost and exercise training is an important way to reduce the effects of this and remain independent. However, not everyone can perform this exercise and the muscle responses to exercise are often reduced in older people. So far there has been no drug found to specifically treat or reduce this problem. Muscle size depends on the balance of muscle protein breakdown and synthesis (building). This balance is regulated by multiple signals within the body, but a particular molecule - the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR), is known to play an important role. For protein synthesis to build up the muscles, this pathway is needed to start the process when triggered by eating protein or exercise. Although this would suggest that mTOR activity is good, excessive levels of this signalling seem to have negative impacts on muscle maintenance with age. In animal studies, blocking mTOR signalling has stopped the development of a number of age-related diseases and increased health-span. Drugs that block this pathway (e.g. Rapamune) reduce the stimulation of muscle protein synthesis, possibly through changing the immune system, but conversely have also been shown to increase muscle size and reduce markers of nerve supply loss. This means that drugs which block the mTOR pathway could, in older people, help to reduce the negative impacts of excessive mTOR signalling on muscle size and function. The investigators aim to recruit 16 healthy male volunteers over 50 years old to investigate how the drug Rapamune (which blocks the mTOR pathway) affects aged human muscle both on its own and when combined with resistance exercise training.

CONDITIONS

Official Title

Impacts of Mechanistic Target of Rapamycin (mTOR) Inhibition on Aged Human Muscle (Rapamune)

Who Can Participate

Age: 50Years - 90Years
MALE
Healthy Volunteers

Eligibility Criteria

Eligible

You may qualify if you...

  • Participant is willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the study
  • Participant is physically able to complete the resistance exercise training programme
Not Eligible

You will not qualify if you...

  • A BMI less than 18 or greater than 35 kg/m2
  • Active cardiovascular, cerebrovascular or respiratory disease such as uncontrolled hypertension (BP > 160/100), angina, heart failure (class III/IV), arrhythmia, right to left cardiac shunt, recent cardiac event, COPD, pulmonary hypertension, or recent stroke
  • Any metabolic disease
  • Clotting dysfunction
  • A history of or current neurological or musculoskeletal conditions (e.g. epilepsy)
  • Participation in another research study in the last 3 months involving invasive procedures or an inconvenience allowance
  • Contraindications to MRI scanning including claustrophobia, pacemaker, or metal implants
  • Contraindications to the use of Rapamycin such as scheduled vaccinations (as rapamycin can reduce vaccine efficacy)

AI-Screening

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Trial Site Locations

Total: 1 location

1

University of Nottingham School of Medicine

Derby, United Kingdom, DE22 3DT

Actively Recruiting

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Research Team

P

Philip Atherton, PhD

CONTACT

How is the study designed?

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Masking

SINGLE

Allocation

RANDOMIZED

Model

PARALLEL

Primary Purpose

HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH

Number of Arms

2

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