Losartan Potassium

Clinical trials investigating Losartan Potassium are studying different patient groups and health problems, such as heart disease, brain tumors, kidney disease, and bone disorders. These studies look at outcomes like safety, symptom control, organ function, and disease progression. The article below explains what each trial is trying to learn.

Table of Contents

Trial overview

These clinical trials study Losartan Potassium in different patient groups and disease settings.[1] The trials are not all for the same illness, and they use different study designs, such as interventional studies, placebo comparisons, and open-label research.[1]

Across the trial set, researchers are looking at whether Losartan Potassium can help with heart disease, kidney disease, bone disease, brain tumors, and inflammatory heart problems after COVID-19.[1]

Heart and blood vessel studies

Several trials focus on heart failure and related heart conditions.[3][5][7] One Phase 3 study in people with heart failure and recovered left ventricular ejection fraction compares stopping beta-blockers with continuing treatment, and Losartan appears as one of the treatment options in the study plan.[3]

Another Phase 3 trial in type 2 diabetes studies high-dose treatment with RAS-antagonists and beta-blockers to reduce cardiac death or cardiac hospitalization, and Losartan is one of the drugs listed in that treatment group.[5] A Phase 3 trial in aortic stenosis tests Losartan Potassium against placebo to see whether it slows the worsening of valve narrowing and valve calcification over 24 months.[7]

A low-intervention trial in non-ischemic cardiomyopathy studies whether stopping neurohormonal therapy is no worse than keeping it in patients who had a strong response to cardiac resynchronization therapy.[1] In this study, Losartan is one of many allowed drugs in the treatment background.[1]

A Phase 2 heart failure study also includes Losartan among many comparison treatments while testing XXB750, with the main outcome being the change in NT-proBNP at Week 16.[8]

Kidney, bone, and other conditions

Losartan Potassium is also being studied in idiopathic IgA nephropathy, which is a kidney disease where the immune system plays a role.[9] This Phase 3 trial looks at proteinuria reduction, meaning less protein in the urine, over 4 to 10 months depending on the study arm.[9]

A Phase 2 trial in osteogenesis imperfecta includes patients aged 16 years and older and measures change in CTX, a bone resorption marker, by Week 24.[6] This study aims to find an effective dose of Losartan for that patient group.[6]

A Phase 4 study called the GranStone Trial tests whether Losartan or empagliflozin can lower the risk of kidney stones and disease progression in paraffin oil induced granulomatous disease.[10] The main outcome is image-verified new or increased nephrolithiasis or nephrocalcinosis between 1 and 24 months.[10]

What outcomes are measured

The trials use different primary outcomes, which are the main results each study is built to measure.[1] In heart studies, outcomes include recurrence of left ventricular dysfunction, heart failure relapse, changes in ejection fraction, changes in left ventricular volume, NT-proBNP levels, hospitalization, and urgent treatment visits.[1][3][5][8]

In the aortic stenosis trial, researchers measure peak aortic velocity by echocardiography and valve calcification by non-contrast computed tomography after 24 months.[7] In the brain tumor study, the main outcomes are radiographic biomarkers such as relative cerebral blood flow and tissue stiffness measured in the tumor area.[4]

In kidney and bone studies, the outcomes include proteinuria, CTX, and imaging-confirmed kidney stone or calcium changes.[6][9][10]

Who the trials include

The target populations are different from one study to another.[1] Some trials include adults with heart failure or recovered ejection fraction, while others focus on people with type 2 diabetes, non-ischemic cardiomyopathy, aortic stenosis, IgA nephropathy, or paraffin oil induced granulomatous disease.[1][3][5][7][9][10]

Some studies also include patients with newly diagnosed or recurrent glioblastoma, or brain metastases from non-small-cell lung cancer.[4] One trial specifically includes older adolescents and adults aged 16 years and above with osteogenesis imperfecta.[6]

Trial phases and designs

The trial set includes Phase 2, Phase 3, Phase 4, and low-intervention research.[1] Phase 2 studies usually explore early signs of benefit and help find the right dose, while Phase 3 studies compare treatments in larger groups and look more closely at effectiveness.[4][6][7][9]

One trial is completed, several are authorised, and the study designs include interventional treatment, placebo control, and open-label testing, meaning both the researchers and participants know what treatment is given in that study.[1][2][4]

Trial ID Phase Condition studied Status Enrollment
2024-516463-84-00 Phase 3 Inflammatory cardiovascular involvement due to COVID-19 Completed 280
NCT20180032 Phase 2 Glioblastoma and brain metastases from NSCLC Authorised 153
NCT04913870 Phase 3 Aortic stenosis Authorised 278
2024-515516-50-00 Phase 2 Osteogenesis Imperfecta Authorised 30
NCT04662723 Phase 3 Idiopathic IgA nephropathy Authorised 432
2026-525608-85-00 Phase 4 Paraffin Oil Induced Granulomatous Disease Authorised 100
2023-508798-94-00 Phase 3 Heart failure Authorised 1300
NCT02817360 Phase 3 Type 2 diabetes mellitus Authorised 889
2025-521780-12-00 Low Intervention Non-ischemic cardiomyopathy Authorised 64
2023-504678-39-00 Phase 2 Heart failure Completed 740

Ongoing Clinical Trials on Losartan Potassium

  • Study of stopping heart failure medications in patients with non-ischemic cardiomyopathy who responded very well to cardiac resynchronization therapy

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Spain
  • Study on Losartan and Hydrochlorothiazide for Osteogenesis Imperfecta in Patients Aged 16 and Above

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Italy
  • Study on the Effects of Losartan Potassium in Patients with Mild to Moderate Aortic Stenosis

    Recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Denmark
  • Study on Stopping Beta-Blockers in Heart Failure Patients with Recovered Heart Function Using Carvedilol and Drug Combination

    Recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    France
  • Study of Empagliflozin, Losartan Potassium and Hydrochlorothiazide to Prevent Kidney Stones in Patients with Paraffin Oil Induced Granulomatous Disease

    Not yet recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Denmark
  • Study on Preventing Heart Disease in Diabetes Patients Using Eprosartan Mesilate and Drug Combination

    Not yet recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Austria Spain
  • Study on Corticosteroids, Dapagliflozin, and Drug Combination for Proteinuria in IgA Nephropathy Patients with Active or Chronic Kidney Lesions

    Not yet recruiting

    1 1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Italy
  • Study on the Effects of Losartan Potassium on Brain Tumors in Patients with Glioblastoma or Brain Metastases from Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Norway
  • Study of XXB750 and Drug Combination for Patients with Heart Failure

    Not recruiting

    1 1
    Bulgaria Czechia Denmark France Germany Hungary +5
  • Study of Prednisolone and Losartan in patients with heart inflammation after COVID-19 infection

    Not recruiting

    1 1 1
    Investigated diseases:
    Austria Germany

Glossary

  • Clinical trial: A research study in people that tests whether a treatment works and whether it is safe.
  • Phase: A stage of a clinical trial. Later phases usually include more people and look more closely at how well a treatment works.
  • Interventional study: A study where researchers give a treatment or compare treatments to see what happens.
  • Placebo: An inactive treatment that looks like the real treatment. It helps researchers compare results fairly.
  • Primary outcome: The main result a trial is designed to measure.
  • Ejection fraction: A measure of how much blood the heart pumps out with each beat.
  • Proteinuria: Too much protein in the urine. It can be a sign of kidney damage.
  • NT-proBNP: A blood marker that can rise when the heart is under strain or heart failure is worsening.
  • Cardiac resynchronization therapy: A treatment that helps the heart chambers beat in a better rhythm.
  • Nephrolithiasis: Kidney stones.
  • Nephrocalcinosis: Calcium buildup in the kidneys.
  • Radiographic biomarker: A measurement seen on imaging scans that helps researchers track disease changes.

References