Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
MUFObes: MonoUnsaturated Fatty Acids in Obesity - a Comparison Between 3 Different Diets in Weight Maintenance and the Prevention of Lifestyle Diseases in Obese Subjects. A Randomised, Long-term Intervention Study.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of three diets different in type and amount of fat in weight maintenance and prevention of life-style diseases in obese subjects.
The obesity epidemic has raised concerns, because of complications such as type 2 diabetes,
cardiovascular disease and certain types of cancer. Much conflict and confusion about the
optimal diet for weight control exists among the public.
The current dietary recommendations aim at reducing the total fat in the diet to less than
30% of calories, increasing carbohydrates to 55-60%, and protein from lean meat and dairy
products to 15-20%, and to keep the intake of sugar sweetened soft-drinks limited. There is
good evidence from meta-analyses of intervention studies that a low fat diet can prevent
weight gain in normal weight individuals, induce a small but clinically relevant weight loss
in overweight individuals, and also reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease and type 2
diabetes.
However this recommended diet may not be of the optimal composition in preventing the
progressive increase in obesity and lifestyle diseases. The traditional dietary
recommendation has been challenged by the epidemiologist Walter Willett, Harvard Medical
School in Boston. He claims that dietary fat is less important for the development of
obesity, and that the fat content of the diet can be 40-45% of the energy providing from
mainly mono- and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Based on mainly large-scale observational
studies ('Nurses Health Study') he has developed new dietary guidelines, expressed as a new
diet pyramid. In contrast to the current guidelines, more plant oils and plant foods,
limited animal products, such as meat and dairy products (even lean products), and increased
intake of olive oil, nuts, etc., e.g. guidelines closer to the "Mediterranean Diet".
There is circumstantial evidence to support that this moderate fat, MUFA-rich diet will have
a beneficial effect on some of the traditional risk factors for cardiovascular disease and
type-2 diabetes. However, there is also growing concern that the increased total fat content
will lead to weight gain and increased risk of obesity, and secondary to this, type-2
diabetes and cardiovascular disease. This debate has now been taken up by some of the finest
scientific journals. To test this hypothesis the largest and longest dietary intervention
trial in Denmark is carried out at the Department of Human Nutrition.
The objective is to identify the diet and diet components most effective for protection
against weight gain, weight regain and prevention of life-style diseases in obese subjects.
The three diets tested are according to:
1. Willetts new dietary recommendations. High in mono unsaturated fat and low in glycemic
index (50 subjects).
2. The traditional dietary recommendations. Low in fat and medium in glycemic index (50
subjects).
3. The average Danish diet (Control). High in fat and high in glycemic index (25
subjects).
The diets are ad libitum (i.e. no restriction in calorie intake), but very strict in dietary
composition.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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