Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Different Weight-loss Methods on Gut-brain Interactions
While exposure to an obesogenic environment has increased for almost every individual in
western society, not everyone is equally susceptible to overeating and not everyone becomes
obese. Teasing apart the physiological underpinnings of those individual seemingly
protective- differences may contribute to the development of successful preventive measures
and treatment. Neuroimaging studies started to deliver important insights into the
neuroanatomical determination of individual eating behavior. However, food intake is not
only determined by the brain, but is orchestrated by an interaction of peripheral hormones
with neural circuits and decision-making processes. This interactive axis is also referred
to as the gut-brain axis. While individual aspects of the axis have been studied
extensively, detailed insight in the interaction of gut and brain in the regulation of food
intake is lacking.
Objective: The current study aims to investigate the effect of a) caloric restriction (very
low calorie diet (VLCD)); b) caloric restriction with mechanical restriction (Laparoscopic
adjustable gastric banding (LAGB)); and c) caloric restriction with mechanical restriction
and physiological changes through malapsorption (Roux- en- Y bypass (RYGB) surgery) on
gut-brain interactions to find an optimal balance for weight loss and long-term sustained
weight maintenance.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 45 |
Est. completion date | |
Est. primary completion date | January 2015 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 60 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: In order to be eligible to participate in this study, a subject must
qualify for weight loss surgery with LAGB or RYGB, as evaluated by a physician at intake
for surgery. Furthermore, subjects must meet all of the following criteria: - Subject, male or female, is age 18 to 60 years of age. - Subject must be able to understand and be willing to sign an informed consent document. - Subject must be willing and able to participate in all aspects of the study and agree to comply with all study requirements for the duration of the study. - Subject has a body mass index (BMI) of 40 - 45 or 35 to 39.9 plus one or more co-morbid diseases expected to improve with weight loss, including but not limited to hypertension, dyslipidemia, obstructive sleep apnea, or diabetes mellitus. - Subject must be of sufficient and stable medical health, as evaluated by physician at intake. - Subject must have failed standard obesity therapy of diet, exercise, behaviour modification, and pharmacologic agents either alone or in combination, as assessed at the intake for surgery by a physician. - For the fMRI measurements inclusion criteria are as follows: not having any metallic fragments in the body, being right-handed. Because of the different brain laterality in left- and right-handed subjects we chose to include only right-handed subjects. Hence the results can be compared between the subjects. Exclusion Criteria: - - Subject has history of/or signs and/or symptoms of gastro-duodenal ulcer disease, as evaluated by physician at intake for the surgery. - Subject has had significant weight loss in the last 3 months (>5kg). - Subject has a history or is diagnosed with eating disorders. - Subject has renal and/or hepatic insufficiency, as evaluated by physician at intake. - Subject has thyroid disease, which is not controlled with medication, as evaluated by physician at intake for the surgery. - Female subject who is pregnant (i.e., has a positive urine or blood pregnancy test prior to the procedure), is suspected to be pregnant, is lactating or is of childbearing potential but refuses to use adequate contraception during the study. - Female subject who started birth control pills less than 3 months before enrollment, or who plans to start taking birth control pills during the study. - Subjects who cannot discontinue either prescription or over the counter weight loss medications for at least 30 days prior to the start of the study as well as during the trial period. - Subjects who have started medications within the last 3 months that are known to cause weight gain. - Subjects who have cardiac pacemakers or other electronic implantable devices. - Subjects who have psychiatric disease including but not limited to manic-depressive disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder, depression or suicidal tendencies. - Subject currently uses or has a history of illicit drug(s) or abuses alcohol (defined as regular or daily consumption of more than 4 alcoholic drinks per day). - Subject has participated in a clinical study with an investigational new drug, biological, or therapeutic device within = 28 days prior to enrollment in this study, and does not agree to abstain from participation in other clinical trials of any kind during this study. - Presence of contra-indications for f-MRI, as mentioned in the screening form and informed consent of the faculty of psychology (see section E2 and F1). - Claustrophobia - Being left-handed - Metallic fragments in the body |
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Netherlands | Maastricht University (metabolic research unit Maastricht (MRUM)) | Maastricht |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Maastricht University Medical Center |
Netherlands,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | the optimal interaction of gut hormones and brain activity | To determine the optimal interaction of gut hormones and brain activity, resulting in successful weight loss and sustained weight maintenance. This objective will be investigated by examining the effect of a) caloric restriction (VLCD); b) caloric restriction with mechanical restriction (LAGB); and c) caloric restriction with mechanical restriction and physiological changes through malapsorption (RYGB) on food reward processing and decision-making in the brain and on gastrointestinal hormone release. The main parameters contributing to efficient, effective and satisfactorily weight maintenance at the same time is the change in satiety and in food reward upon an iso-energetic test-meal. This will be the main factor contributing to compliance and preventing reversal, (measured by visual analog scales (VAS), changes in ad libitum meal intake, representation in the brain of food reward processing and decision making, computer test, TFEQ for cognitive restraint, disinhibition and hunger). |
30 to 60 days: At baseline and after weight loss (10% of initial weight) | No |
Secondary | gut-microbiota | Possible changes in the gut-microbiota population, interacting with neuronal signaling for satiety and reward; | 30 to 60 days: At baseline and after weight loss (10% of initial weight) | No |
Secondary | body composition | The weight loss itself and changes in body-composition; underscoring weight maintenance. | 30 to 60 days: At baseline and after weight loss (10% of initial weight) | No |
Secondary | endocannabinoid profile | Possible changes in the endocannabinoid profile, interacting with neuronal signaling for satiety and reward | 30 to 60 days: At baseline and after weight loss (10% of initial weight) | No |
Secondary | Diet induced energy expenditure | Changes in resting- and diet-induced energy expenditure; underscoring weight maintenance. | 30 to 60 days: At baseline and after weight loss (10% of initial weight) | No |
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