Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05182138 |
Other study ID # |
02/033/15 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
October 10, 2016 |
Est. completion date |
June 24, 2019 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2022 |
Source |
University of Aberdeen |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Zinc is important in biology and allows the proper function of proteins in living organisms.
Severe zinc deficiency in animals and humans over long periods of time can therefore cause
adverse effects. In the UK, the zinc status of most people is adequate, but about 20% of the
population, especially adolescents in deprived communities and vegetarians/vegans, are likely
marginally zinc deficient. Because potatoes are a favoured food in adolescents and
vegetarians/vegans, the investigators have improved the zinc content of Saxon potatoes by
biofortification, which involves spraying potato plant leaves with zinc salts. The potato
zinc concentration is about three times the level in unfortified potatoes of the same
variety. This level of zinc can boost the zinc intake of people who are marginally zinc
deficient so that they become zinc adequate. Indeed, in rat studies, the investigators have
shown that addition of some zinc-biofortified potato to a low zinc diet improves the zinc and
health status of the animals. In the present study, the investigators propose to investigate
whether the potato biofortification can improve the zinc and health status of volunteers.
Because most of the volunteers (healthy adult men and women after the menopause) might have
normal or variable zinc status at recruitment, it might not be possible to see the benefits
of the potato diets and therefore, the investigators shall reduce the zinc intake of all 45
participants to 1 mg Zn/d for a period of two weeks prior to feeding 15 randomly selected
individuals the biofortified potato diets (4 mg Zn/d) for two weeks. Zinc and health status
will be measured by blood tests before and after zinc depletion and after feeding the potato
diets. Results will be compared with data from 15 volunteers eating unfortified potato diets
with a daily placebo and 15 volunteers consuming the unfortified potato diets with a zinc
supplement (18 mg/d) as a positive control.
Description:
There is a small but critical window of dietary zinc intake from 1 to 4 mg Zn/day over which
the symptoms of long-term zinc deficiency go from acute to chronic in nature. For example, at
1 mg Zn/day intake for several months, most people will develop skin lesions, but at 4 mg
Zn/day, skin lesions would be very rare. However, impaired immune response can be detected
when consuming zinc up to 6 mg/day over several months. Dietary intakes of <4 mg Zn/day in
developed countries is rare but can be common in developing countries.
This study has been carefully designed to test the hypothesis that consumption of zinc
biofortified potatoes can rescue the zinc status and health of people who are of low zinc
status and consuming diets which are borderline acutely zinc deficient. The protocol for the
study includes 2 weeks of zinc deprivation at around 1 mg Zn/day dietary intake (Very Low
Zinc Diet) followed by 2 weeks of a borderline acutely/chronically deficient diet of around
4-5 mg Zn/day (Low Zinc Diet). Two weeks on the Very Low Zinc Diet has been carefully and
deliberately selected to cause biochemical changes due to zinc deprivation but not signs and
symptoms of deficiency such as skin lesions. Less than 2 weeks is insufficient to cause the
biochemical effects and more that 2 weeks risks the physical manifestation of deficiency and
also non-compliance by volunteers, since the diets may be less palatable than their habitual
diet. Thus all volunteers will have low zinc status at the time of starting to eat the Low
Zinc Diet, and the effect of eating the biofortified potatoes in addition, which will add an
extra 1 mg to the daily zinc intake, should be seen in all the zinc and health status tests
that the investigators are proposing. In rat studies in which the investigators did just this
kind of intervention, the biofortified potato ameliorated the effect of zinc deficiency on
growth, food intake and immune function.