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Clinical Trial Summary

Amino acids (AAs) are crucial for protein synthesis, in influencing nutritional status, as sources of vital elements (e.g., nucleotides, neurotransmitters) and as signal molecules for the modulation of gene expression and epigenetic mechanisms. Data on the role of amino acids in underweight patients with anorexia nervosa (AN) are unknown. This study aims to evaluate whether a blend of essential amino acids (EAA) could influence the change in lean body mass (LBM) in patients with AN during weight restoration, treated with intensive inpatient enhanced cognitive behavior therapy (CBT-E). A total of 92 patients will be randomized to EAA supplementation or placebo supplementation upon admission to inpatient treatment. LBM, but also body weight, specific and general psychopathology, impairment assessment will be assessed at baseline and after 13 weeks of treatment.


Clinical Trial Description

Nutrition is one of the main determinants of health. Among the three primary macronutrients, proteins - specifically, their quantity and quality (i.e., their specific amino acid profile) - play a crucial role in regulating metabolic health and longevity. Amino acids (AAs) are crucial not only for protein synthesis and influencing nutritional status but also as sources of vital elements (e.g., nucleotides, neurotransmitters) and as signal molecules for the modulation of gene expression and epigenetic mechanisms. To our knowledge, only one study was conducted on underweight patients with anorexia nervosa (AN). The study design was to compare the efficacy of the semi-essential amino acid L-tyrosine (100 mg/kg/day) versus a placebo supplement. Tyrosine reduced reaction time and test duration in memory tasks and improved mood. However, to date, no studies have evaluated the effect of supplementation with amino acids in patients with anorexia nervosa who undergo specialist treatment aimed at weight recovery and remission from psychopathology. The study has the primary aim of evaluating the effectiveness of supplementation with essential amino acids (EAA) on the change in lean body mass (LBM) with weight recovery in patients with AN treated with specialist treatment for eating disorders, compared to placebo supplementation. The secondary aims of the study are to evaluate the effectiveness of EAA supplementation on physical fitness, weight recovery, change of the general and eating disorder psychopathology, and psychosocial impairment, compared to placebo supplementation. A 13-week randomized double-blind placebo-controlled study design will be used. Patients will be randomized to EAA supplementation or placebo supplementation upon admission. Randomization will be carried out by an independent external figure adopting the following stratification: Group 1: Body Mass Index (BMI) <= 15.2 & age <= 20 Group 2: BMI > 15.2 & age <= 20 Group 3: BMI <= 15.2 & age > 20 Group 4: BMI > 15.2 & age > 20 Treatment will involve a 13-week inpatient or a 13-week day hospital. Follow-up will be performed for both groups at 24 weeks. Considering that it will not be possible to carry out a closed follow-up, we will give the possibility to those who have taken the mixture of EAA to continue this treatment after the end of inpatient or day-hospital, for other 24 weeks, to evaluate the potential long-term maintenance of the treatment. The study is performed at the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit of the Villa Garda Hospital - Italy. The supervision of the diagnostic evaluation and treatment is carried out weekly by the Director of the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit of the Villa Garda Hospital. Study participants will be recruited from patients who meet the diagnostic criteria for AN, assessed with the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE.17) interview, consecutively admitted at the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit of the Villa Garda Hospital. All participants will meet the appropriateness criteria of hospitalization established by the Veneto Region and described in table 1 of Annex B of DGR 94/2012. On the entry day into the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit, the patient will meet a unit physician for the medical history collection, the physical examination, and the prescription of humoral and instrumental examinations. On this occasion, the enrollment phase will take place which will include the complete collection of data for the compilation of the Data Collection Form. At the end of the data collection, if the criteria for inclusion in the study are met, the patient will receive detailed information on: - Procedures and objectives of the study - Purposes, methods, inconveniences, risks, and benefits that the study may entail - Freedom to participate and withdraw from the study without affecting subsequent treatment - Compensation procedures and treatment of any damages deriving from participation in the study. Before requesting to sign the informed consent and the possibility of using (and having consent to use) the information collected during the trial, the patient will be given a statement to read containing detailed information on the study. If the patient, or in the case of a minor patient, his/her parents (s), and/or legal guardians (s), agrees to participate in the study, he/she will sign the informed consent form and the authorization to process personal and sensitive data. If the patient meets the criteria for inclusion in the study but refuses to participate in the study, he/she will continue the intensive rehabilitation treatment applied at the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit of the Villa Garda Hospital. After the interview and signing the informed consent and data processing, the patient will be randomized to EAA supplementation or placebo supplementation. Both arms will receive enhanced cognitive behavior therapy (CBT-E). The intensive CBT-E applied at the Nutritional Rehabilitation Unit of the Villa Garda Hospital has been described in national and international publications. The treatment is based on the transdiagnostic cognitive-behavioral theory and therapy of eating disorders developed by the Center for Research on Eating Disorders and Obesity of the University of Oxford. The inpatient treatment includes 13 weeks, followed by seven weeks of day-hospital, and is divided into four phases that are individualized to address the maintenance mechanisms of the eating disorder psychopathology operating in the individual patient. - Phase One - Starting Well. This phase aims to engage the patient, educate him about his eating disorder, build the Personalized Formulation, start the collaborative weight measurement and use the Monitoring Records and the Eating Problem Check List (EPCL) questionnaire. During this phase, the patient is encouraged to make maximum behavioral change, including starting the weight regain process, if indicated. - Phase Two. In this phase, a formal assessment of the progress and obstacles to change and of the possible presence of external maintenance mechanisms is performed to plan the next phase of treatment. - Phase Three. The precise content of this phase is dictated by the specific psychopathology operating in the patient and the treatment becomes very individualized. In typical cases, negative body image, calorie and cognitive dietary restriction, events and emotions affecting nutrition, and, in a subset of patients, one or more of the external maintenance mechanisms identified in Phase Two are addressed in specific modules of the extended version of the treatment. At this stage, the underweight patient in most cases reaches his BMI goal and starts practicing weight maintenance. Towards the end of this phase, backward steps and mental states are also addressed to learn to decentralize oneself from the mental state of the eating disorder, to prevent relapse. - Phase Four - Ending Well. This phase aims to conclude the treatment well and prepare the transition to outpatient therapy. For this purpose, a written maintenance plan is created, in collaboration with the patient, in which the residual problems are to be faced and the procedures to continue to be used, the strategies and methods to prevent relapse, the ways of organizing life after discharge and post-admission therapy. The nutritional rehabilitation protocol of the Villa Garda Hospital applied to underweight patients with AN is as follows: - The weight goal to be achieved is a BMI ≥ 19. - The expected speed of weight recovery is between 1 and 1.5 kg per week. - The daily calorie content of the meal plan is established collaboratively with the patient in the first as follows: - Week 1: Menu A (1,500 kcal) - Week 2: Menu B (2,000 kcal) Afterward: - If the weight increases between 1 and 1.5 kg per week the meal plan is maintained with the same calorie content as the previous week. - If the weight increases by less than 1 kg per week, the kcal of the food plan is increased by 500 kcal per day. For example, from Menu B to Menu C (2500 kcal) or from Menu C to Menu D (3000 kcal) - If the weight increases by more than 1.5 kg per week, the kcal of the food plan must be reduced by 250 kcal per day. For example, from Menu C to Menu B / C (2250 kcal) - When the patient reaches a BMI of 19, the goal of the program is to identify a weight range of 3 kg that it can be without adopting a calorie dietary restriction. In most patients, weight maintenance occurs with a diet between 2000 (Menu B) and 2500 kcal (Menu C). - Physical activity proposed in the rehabilitation program All patients above the BMI of 15 do two 30-minute sessions per week of calisthenics followed by a physiotherapist. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05290285
Study type Interventional
Source Villa Garda Hospital
Contact Riccardo Dalle Grave, MD
Phone 348 412 0680
Email rdalleg@gmail.com
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 1, 2022
Completion date May 1, 2024

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