Intra-Abdominal Fat Clinical Trial
— (HDLS2)Official title:
Effects of Intermittent Energy Restriction on Intra-Abdominal Fat and the Gut Microbiome: A Randomized Trial
Intermittent energy restriction (IER) may have important advantages over daily energy restriction (DER) in producing sustained weight loss and reducing cancer risk. IER is already being promoted with limited evidence, thus, additional evidence is urgently needed from rigorously conducted clinical trials. IER has been proposed to invoke a greater metabolic shift to fat metabolism than DER and preferentially reduce central obesity. The Investigators adapted the IER and the Mediterranean diet (MED) approach which have been recommended as a healthy weight-loss diet in the management of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, for an ethnically diverse population. The effectiveness was compared to an active comparator (DASH diet) in reducing overall and visceral adiposity in a randomized trial among 60 middle-aged adults with visceral obesity. This 12-week pilot demonstrated the feasibility and safety of IER and the culturally-adapted MED [NCT03639350]. The six-month randomized trial will demonstrate the superiority of IER over DER in reducing fat and total fat mass, and in improving cancer-related biomarkers and gut microbiome functions. This longer trial, to confirm safety and superiority of IER over DER in reducing VAT and liver fat will expand our understanding of adherence to IER and its effect on the gut microbiome as a possible mediator of systemic inflammation. The Investigators will conduct a 24-week randomized trial of IER+MED vs. MED/DER among 260 middle-aged adults of East-Asian, Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islanders or White ethnicity with high VAT. The primary research question is whether a diet plan combining IER and the MED dietary pattern will be superior to MED/DER in reducing abdominal MRI-measured visceral and liver fat and dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) measured total adiposity. The Healthy Diet and Lifestyle Study II (HDLS2) will recruit 312 men and women from the general population with VAT at or above the population-median (men: ≥90 cm2; women ≥80 cm2) and randomize them to the IER+MED or MED/DER diet (156 per group). The IER+MED group will follow IER for two consecutive days (70% energy restriction) and total energy MED diet for the other five days of the week, reaching an overall 20% energy restriction. The MED/DER group will be prescribed a 20% daily energy restriction. With an expected attrition rate of ~16% (10% in Pilot), the investigators expect 130 participants per group to complete the study.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 260 |
Est. completion date | September 30, 2026 |
Est. primary completion date | September 30, 2026 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 35 Years to 69 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Age 35-69 years old - BMI between 25-40 kg/m2 - Currently non-smoking - No serious health issues - Fully vaccinated for COVID-19 - Normal blood chemistry profile - East Asian (Chinese, Japanese, Korean), Filipino, Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander or white/European ancestry - Non-drinkers / low habitual drinkers, i.e., men =15 drinks per week, women =10 drinks per week - Volunteers living on the island of Oahu - For peri-menopausal women, the investigators will require that they had their last period at least 1 year before baseline) - DXA VAT =90 cm2 for men and =80 cm2 for women - Able to read, speak, and write in English Exclusion Criteria: - Pregnancy - Contraindication to MR imaging (e.g. pacemaker, claustrophobia, metal implants) - Previous surgery to remove any part of the small intestine, colon or rectum (e.g. ileostomy or colectomy) or an amputation of a leg or arm. - For women, taking any anti-estrogen medications (e.g tamoxifen, Nolvadex, Istubal, Valodex) - For men, taking any anti-androgen medications (e.g., Eulexin (flutamide); Anandron or Nilandron (nilutamide); Casodex (bicalutamide); Proscar or Propecia (finasteride); Avodart (dutasteride); or bexlosteride, izonsteride, turosteride, episteride). - Diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes or Type 2 diabetes and taking insulin for treatment - Diagnosis of thyroid conditions under treatment with hormones or medications. - Serious health issues such as dialysis, organ transplant, celiac disease, Crohn's disease, chronic liver disease, active case of hepatitis B or C, chronic kidney disease, or any condition that, in the opinion of the investigator, is a contraindication to participation. - Previous problem with fasting blood collection - Cannot exercise (walk) for up to 1hr/day Deferral Criteria : Volunteers with the following conditions will be called back after the specified duration: - Treatments in past 6 months: chemotherapy or radiation of abdomen/pelvis; corticosteroid hormones; prescription weight loss drugs; estrogen/androgen receptor blockers - Substantial weight change (>20lbs) in past 6 months - Antibiotic use in past 3 months - Colonoscopy, sigmoidoscopy, colon irrigation/bowel cleaning in the past 3 months - MRI/CAT scan with contrast in the past 2 weeks |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Hawaii Cancer Center | Honolulu | Hawaii |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Hawaii | National Cancer Institute (NCI), National Institutes of Health (NIH), University of Hawaii Cancer Research Center |
United States,
O'Reilly H, Panizza CE, Lim U, Yonemori KM, Wilkens LR, Shvetsov YB, Harvie MN, Shepherd J, Zhu FM, Le Marchand L, Boushey CJ, Cassel KD. Utility of self-rated adherence for monitoring dietary and physical activity compliance and assessment of participant — View Citation
Panizza CE, Wong MC, Kelly N, Liu YE, Shvetsov YB, Lowe DA, Weiss EJ, Heymsfield SB, Kennedy S, Boushey CJ, Maskarinec G, Shepherd JA. Diet Quality and Visceral Adiposity among a Multiethnic Population of Young, Middle, and Older Aged Adults. Curr Dev Nut — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Abdominal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure visceral fat and liver fat | To investigate whether a diet plan combining intermittent energy restriction (IER) and a Mediterranean diet (MED) dietary pattern (IER+MED) will be superior to a MED diet and daily energy restriction (DER) (MED/DER) in reducing abdominal MRI-measured visceral and liver fat. | Week 24 | |
Primary | Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) scan for total adiposity | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing DXA-measured total adiposity. | Week 24 | |
Secondary | DXA scan for total adiposity at week 48 (24 weeks post trial) | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing long term DXA-measured total adiposity, after 24 weeks post clinical trial. | Week 48 | |
Secondary | Measured body weight at end of trial | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing body weight at the end of the trial. | Week 24 | |
Secondary | Measured body weight at week 48 (24 weeks post trial). | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in maintaining long term body weight loss after 24 weeks post clinical trial. | Week 48 | |
Secondary | Computed body mass index (BMI) at end of trial. | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing body weight at the end of the trial. | Week 24 | |
Secondary | Computed body mass index (BMI) (24 weeks post trial) | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in maintaining long term body weight loss after 24 weeks post clinical trial. | Week 48 | |
Secondary | Measured waist- and hip-circumferences at end of trial. | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing body circumference measures associated with visceral adiposity at the end of trial. | Week 24 | |
Secondary | Measured waist- and hip-circumferences (24 weeks post trial) | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in maintaining long term body weight loss after 24 weeks post clinical trial. | Week 48 | |
Secondary | Fat mass, computation of fat mass using completed measurement values at end of trial. | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing fat mass associated with visceral adiposity at the end of trial. | Week 24 | |
Secondary | Fat mass, computation of fat mass using completed measurement values (24 weeks post trial) | To investigate whether the diet plan IER+MED will be superior to MED/DER in reducing fat mass associated with visceral adiposity at the end of trial in maintaining long term body weight loss after 24 weeks post clinical trial. | Week 48 |
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