Food Addiction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Ultra Crave: A Biopsychobehavioral Investigation of Withdrawal From Ultra-Processed Food in Humans
This study experimentally investigates whether a reduction in ultra-processed (UP) food intake (1) causes aversive withdrawal symptoms in humans, (2) increases the motivational salience of UP food cues and, if so, (3) whether these factors undermine the ability to adhere to a low-UP diet. The following aims and hypotheses are tested: Aim 1: To investigate whether aversive physical, cognitive, and affective withdrawal symptoms emerge in response to reduced UP food intake compared to a high-UP diet, and whether this predicts failure to adhere to a low-UP diet. H1a: Reducing UP food intake will result in aversive physical, cognitive, and affective withdrawal symptoms, as indicated by 1) ecological momentary assessment (EMA) reports of aversive withdrawal symptoms, and 2) heart rate reactivity and subjective distress to an in-lab stressor. H1b: Aversive symptoms of UP food withdrawal will predict greater UP food intake and higher blood glucose levels when trying to adhere to a low UP diet. Aim 2: To investigate whether increased motivational salience of UP food cues emerges in response to reduced UP food intake, and whether this predicts failure to maintain a low-UP diet. H2a: Reducing UP food intake will result in increased motivational salience of UP food cues, as indicated by 1) EMA reports of UP food craving, 2) heart rate reactivity and subjective craving in a simulated fast-food restaurant, 3) heightened reinforcement value for UP food relative to other reinforcers, and 4) greater reward-related neural response to UP food cues. H2b: Increased motivational salience of UP food cues will predict greater UP food intake and higher blood glucose levels when trying to adhere to a low UP diet.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 210 |
Est. completion date | August 5, 2028 |
Est. primary completion date | August 5, 2028 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 22 Years to 60 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - 22 to 60 years of age - English-speaking - Must own an Android or iPhone Smartphone - Live within a 1-hour radius of the laboratory - endorsement of > 4 symptoms on the YFAS 2.0 completed during eligibility screener; at the time of consent, symptom count must remain above threshold for food addiction (this discrepany is based on a previously found tendency during pilot testing to overestimate food addiction symptoms at the time of screening) - Willing and able to follow specific dietary instructions provided by the study team - Willing and able to attend 3 in-person lab visits - Willing to complete 4 phone interviews about foods eaten in the past 24 hours - Willing to report daily intake of food - Like the taste of chocolate milkshake (for fMRI scan eligibility only). Exclusion Criteria: - participants with a self-reported BMI < 18.5 and > 40 - Current diagnosis of disorder that may impact study results or the ability to safely complete study tasks (hypothyroidism (uncontrolled by medication), diabetes, etc.) - History of food allergies - Unable to respond to brief questionnaires within 90-minutes during the day - Work night shifts or irregular shifts - Restrictive dietary requirements (e.g., vegan) or high levels of picky eating - Medications (e.g., insulin, antipsychotic medications) that may impact study results or safe completion of study tasks - Diagnosis of severe mental illness (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar disorder) - Diagnosis of a restrictive eating disorder (e.g., Anorexia Nervosa, Bulimia Nervosa, purging disorder) within the last 5 years - Current diagnoses of disorders that can impact reward/metabolic functioning - 20+ pound weight fluctuation in the last 3-months - Prior weight loss surgery (e.g., bariatric surgery) - Currently pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant, or within 6-months of having given birth - High levels or high-risk intake of alcohol or caffeine - Use of tobacco or nicotine in the past month - Use of THC cannabis within the past week - Unwillingness to abstain from THC cannabis, tobacco or nicotine during the main portion of the study (~22 days) - fMRI contraindications (e.g., claustrophobia, metal implants). - inability to complete a random report within 90 minutes |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Michigan | Ann Arbor | Michigan |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Michigan | Brown University, National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), Oregon Research Institute, Pennington Biomedical Research Center, University of Tasmania |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Withdrawal Symptoms | Withdrawal symptoms (e.g., anger, anxiety) will be assessed using ecological momentary assessment (EMA) on a scale from 1 (not at all) to 7 (extremely); higher scores indicate greater withdrawal symptoms. | Assessed during dietary intervention period for 1 week | |
Primary | Craving of ultra-processed (UP) foods | Craving of UP foods will be assessed using EMA on a scale from 1 (not at all) to 7 (extremely); higher scores indicate greater craving of UP foods. | Assessed during dietary intervention period for 1 week | |
Primary | Low UP food intake | Intake of low UP foods will be assessed using two 24 hour dietary recall interviews. | Assessed during dietary intervention period for 1 week | |
Primary | Self-Reported Low UP food intake | Intake of low UP foods will be assessed using EMA reports of food intake. Responses will be coded into high and low UP food intake based on the NOVA classification. | Assessed during dietary intervention period for 1 week | |
Secondary | Reactivity to a stressor | Stress reactivity will be assessed using an in-lab stress task that has participants listen to an audio recording of a current stressor in their life. Participants' heart rate in response to the audio recording, relative to a baseline measurement, will be used as an indicator of stress reactivity; an increase in heart rate will be indicative of greater stress reactivity. | Assessed post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Self-reported reactivity to a stressor | Stress reactivity will be assessed using an in-lab stress task that has participants listen to an audio recording of a current stressor in their life. Participants' subjective ratings of reactivity will be assessed at baseline (prior to listening to the audio recording) and immediately after listening to the audio recording using the negative affect subscale from the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS); each item is rated on a 1 (very slightly or not at all) to 5 (extremely) scale, with higher numbers indicating greater experienced affect; an increase in score, relative to baseline, will indicate greater stress reactivity. | Assessed post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Cue reactivity to a simulated fast food restaurant | Participants will spend 5 minutes in a simulated fast food restaurant. Participants' heart rate in response to the simulated fast food restaurant, relative to a baseline measurement, will be used as an indicator of cue reactivity; increases in will be indicative of greater cue reactivity. | Assessed post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Self-reported cue reactivity to a simulated fast food restaurant | Participants will spend 5 minutes in a simulated fast food restaurant. Participants' subjective craving will be assessed at baseline (prior to entering the restaurant) and while in the restaurant on a scale from 0 (no craving at all) to 100 (I have never craved food more), with greater numbers indicating higher craving; an increase in score, relative to baseline, will indicate greater cue reactivity. | Assessed post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Level of reinforcement value for ultra processed foods | Participants will complete a computerized task that measures their willingness to work (i.e., reinforcement value) for a UP food gift card relative to a non-food gift card. | Baseline assessed during in-lab Visit 1 (1 day); assessed again post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Magnitude of neural reward-related response to tasting a milkshake | Participants will complete an fMRI paradigm where they see a UP food cue (i.e., picture of a chocolate milkshake) that predict receipt of a UP food (i.e., a chocolate milkshake). The paradigm also includes a control cue (i.e., picture of a water glass) that predicts receipt of a tasteless solution (which contains the ionic components of saliva; 25 mM KCl and 2.5 mM NaHCO3 in distilled water). Participants' activation in neural regions associated with reward (e.g., mOFC, striatum) to the milkshake cue (relative to the water cue) will be used as a measure of increased reward-related response to UP food cues. | Assessed post-dietary intervention during in-lab Visit 3 (1 day) | |
Secondary | Blood Glucose Level | Assessed using a continuous blood glucose monitor. | Assessed during dietary intervention period for 1 week |
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