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Clinical Trial Summary

The energy burning capacity of brown adipose tissue makes it an attractive target for anti-obesity therapies. Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) is the classical regulator of brown adipose tissue; however, recent findings show a pool of novel brown adipose tissue activators that sidestep the need for stimulating the SNS, including cardiac natriuretic peptides. Of interest is that both SNS and non-SNS brown adipose tissue activators are sensitive to physical exercise, which opens new horizons and opportunities to study the potential effect of exercise-based therapeutic interventions. Moreover, a new protein released by exercise-stimulated skeletal muscle, irisin, seems to play a key role in the browning program of white adipose tissue. Most of the available evidence comes from animal studies, which is sometimes difficult to infer to human physiology. The overall objective of the ACTIBATE randomized controlled trial is to study the effect of long-term exercise training (6 months) on brown adipose tissue activity and quantity (primary outcomes) in young overweight and obese adults. The clinical significance of activating and recruiting brown adipose tissue on resting metabolic rate and cardiometabolic profile in humans will be determined. The investigators will also study at the molecular level the benefits of exercise on the regulation pathways in two different tissues: white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle, as well as identifying possible cross-talk between the exercising muscle and heart, and fat. Information from exercise-induced signaling on brown adipose tissue, white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle will help on identifying potential molecular therapeutic candidates.


Clinical Trial Description

The energy burning capacity of brown adipose tissue (BAT) makes it an attractive target for antiobesity therapies. Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) is the classical regulator of BAT; however, recent findings show a pool of novel BAT activators that sidestep the need for stimulating the SNS. Of interest is that both SNS and non-SNS BAT activators are sensitive to physical exercise, which opens new horizons and opportunities to study the potential effect of exercise-based therapeutic interventions. Moreover, a new protein released by exercise-stimulated skeletal muscle, irisin, seems to play a key role in the browning program in white adipose tissue. Most of the available evidence comes from animal studies, which is sometimes difficult to infer to human physiology. To determine whether a controlled physical exercise program is able to facilitate BAT maintenance and function, stimulating pre-existing brown precursors and inducing the specific gene program to favor white-to-brown adipocyte transformation in humans is of clinical relevance.

The primary objective of the ACTIBATE randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to quantify the dose-effect of different exercise intensities, i.e. no exercise, moderate-intensity and vigorous-intensity, on BAT activity and mass (primary outcome), and on energy expenditure, thermogenic response to a test meal, shivering threshold, and cardiovascular disease risk factors, in young adults. The investigators will also obtain biopsies from white adipose tissue and skeletal muscle to analyse the expression of genes encoding proteins involved in the thermogenic machinery. The intervention groups will train 4-5 days/week (60 min per session) for a 24-week period.

With the final aim of making the exercise program transferable to society, the basis for the specific exercise dose in ACTIBATE is the physical activity recommendations for adults proposed by the World Health Organization. Since there is no information regarding the ideal exercise model to activate and recruit BAT, a major objective of ACTIBATE is to evaluate various exercise intensity levels that fall within the current public health recommendations to test whether higher intensity levels provides more benefit than the standard moderate-intensity level. ACTIBATE will combine both aerobic and resistance training. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Prevention


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02365129
Study type Interventional
Source Universidad de Granada
Contact Jonatan R Ruiz, PhD
Phone +34 958 242 754
Email ruizj@ugr.es
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 2015
Completion date July 2017

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