Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
GCRC-CAP-Tracey McLaughlin, MD
The goal of the study is to define the roles played by resistance to insulin-mediated glucose disposal (insulin resistance) and circulating plasma insulin concentrations in: 1) ability to lose weight; 2) reduction of risk for coronary heart disease as a result of weight loss. We hypothesize that in the setting of caloric restriction, manipulating endogenous insulin concentrations will not alter ability of subjects to lose weight, but will lead to different reduction in CHD risk factors. To test this hypothesis, two parallel studs will be performed. First, obese insulin-resistant individuals will be randomized to one of two equally-hypocaloric diets that vary moderately in proportion of carbohydrate and mono/polyunsaturated fats (lower carbohydrate diet will be associated with greater reduction in endogenous insulin secretion). Second, diabetics treated with insulin secretagogues will be compared to diabetics treated with insulin sensitizers with respect to the same outcomes (secretagogues increase insulin secretion and insulin sensitizers decrease insulin concentrations). Endpoints include weight loss, change in insulin resistance, blood pressure, lipid and lipoproteins, markers of endothelial function, daylong insulin and glucose concentrations: these will be compared, in each of the parallel studies, between the group with insulin-stimulating intervention vs the group with the insulin-sparing intervention.
While obesity, insulin resistance, and diabetes are highly associated, it is not clear
whether insulin resistance and compensatory hyperinsulinemia play important roles in the
tendency to gain weight and/or inability to lose weight. The role of hyperinsulinemia in
coronary heart disease (CHD)is also unclear. The specific aims of the proposed research are
as follows:
1. To compare insulin resistant versus insulin sensitive nondiabetic overweight
individuals with respect to their ability to lose weight on a low calorie diet. CHD
risk factors before and after weight loss will also be assessed to determine the degree
to which insulin resistance is associated with CHD risk, as well as the impact that
differences in insulin resistance have on the metabolic benefits of weight loss
2. To determine if weight loss and its associated metabolic benefits vary as a function of
the relative amounts of dietary fat and carbohydrate in hypocaloric diets. Because high
carbohydrate diets increase insulin secretion, the relationship between dietary
composition and change in circulating insulin concentrations will be analyzed with
respect to both weight loss and CHD risk factors.
3. To quantify and compare the improvement in glycemic control and CHD risk factors
associated with weight loss in obese type 2 diabetics, while being treated with 1) an
insulin secretagogue (sulfonylurea) or 2) an insulin sensitizer (thiazolidinedione).
Manipulation of plasma insulin concentrations with these medications will provide a
mechanism by which to evaluate the impact of circulating insulin concentrations on the
described outcome measures.
4. A subgroup of overweight/obese premenopausal women with PCOS will be studied using two
diets in crossover design with regard to macronutrient effects on endogenous
hyperinsulinism. For this subgroup age range will be 18-50 years, BMI 25-50 kg/m2.
5. In order to increase our data and therefore increase our better understanding of fat
cells and insulin resistance and changes in fat cells with weight loss we would like to
increase our participant enrollment to 550 all to be enrolled at Stanford University
Medical Center recruiting Bariatric participants:
Age for Bariatric patients 30-65 men and women BMI 27-no upper limit Currently we have
completed all participants except the bariatric and post bariatric population and those with
hypoglycemia following bariatric surgery.
The ethnic background of subjects reflects Stanford's patient population.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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