NIH style small sample size study for preliminary research on prediabetes

CLINICAL TRIAL PROTOCOL (NIH-STYLE)

Title

Randomized Controlled Trial of NAD⁺ Augmentation on Metabolic and Functional Outcomes in Adults With Prediabetes

Overall Objective

To determine whether NAD⁺ augmentation improves metabolic function, mitochondrial performance, and clinical outcomes in humans.

Specific Aims

Aim 1

Determine whether NAD⁺ augmentation improves insulin sensitivity in adults with prediabetes.

Hypothesis

NAD⁺ augmentation will significantly improve insulin sensitivity compared to placebo.

Aim 2

Evaluate the effect of NAD⁺ augmentation on mitochondrial and metabolic function.

Hypothesis

NAD⁺ augmentation will improve markers of mitochondrial function and metabolic efficiency.

Aim 3

Assess functional and physiologic outcomes.

Hypothesis

NAD⁺ augmentation will improve physical performance, energy utilization, and cardiometabolic parameters.

Study Design

Prospective Randomized Double-blind Placebo-controlled Parallel-group

Population

Inclusion Criteria

Age 40–70 Prediabetes (HbA1c 5.7–6.4) BMI 25–40

Exclusion Criteria

Insulin-dependent diabetes Severe organ failure (CHF NYHA IV, ESRD, active malignancy) Contraindications to infusion therapy

Sample Size

n = 120 participants

60 NAD⁺ group 60 placebo group

Power calculated to detect clinically meaningful change in insulin sensitivity

Intervention

Experimental Group

Intravenous NAD⁺ infusion Standardized dosing protocol (e.g., weekly infusions for 12 weeks, then maintenance)

Control Group

Placebo infusion (normal saline)

Duration

Primary endpoint: 6 months Extended follow-up: 12 months

Primary Outcome

Change in insulin sensitivity (HOMA-IR or hyperinsulinemic clamp)

Secondary Outcomes

HbA1c Fasting glucose Lipid profile Body composition VO2 max Resting energy expenditure Inflammatory markers NAD⁺ levels

Exploratory Outcomes

Continuous glucose monitoring Heart rate variability Physical activity data AI-based physiologic pattern analysis

Data Collection

Baseline

Full metabolic panel Functional testing Body composition NAD⁺ levels

Follow-up

Monthly labs 3-month and 6-month functional testing Continuous wearable monitoring

Statistical Analysis

Intention-to-treat Between-group comparisons Repeated measures ANOVA / mixed models Adjustment for confounders

Innovation

First controlled trial evaluating IV NAD⁺ in humans Direct translation of NAD⁺ biology into clinical intervention Integration of physiologic and metabolic endpoints

Significance

This study directly tests whether restoring NAD⁺ levels can modify metabolic dysfunction in humans, addressing a central mechanism implicated in aging and chronic disease.

Future Directions

If successful, this study will support:

Larger multicenter trials Extension into cardiovascular, neurologic, and aging populations Development of NAD⁺-targeted therapies

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