Overweight Clinical Trial
Official title:
Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease (NAFLD) in Overweight and Obese People Under Nutritional and Lifestyle Follow-up: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a condition of excessive hepatic lipid
accumulation in subjects that consume less than 20g ethanol per day, without other known
causes as drugs consumption or toxins exposure. In Western countries, the rate of this
disease lies about 30% in the general adult population. The process of developing NAFLD can
start from simple steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), which eventually can
lead to cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma in the absence of alcohol abuse. Liver biopsy
is considered the "gold standard" of steatosis, fibrosis and cirrhosis. However, it is
rarely performed because it is an invasive procedure and investigators are focusing in the
application of non-invasive liver damage scores for diagnosis.
The pathogenesis of NAFLD is multifactorial and triggered by environmental factors such as
unbalanced diets and overnutrition as well as by lack of physical activity in the context of
a genetic predisposition. Nowadays, the treatment of NAFLD is based on diet and lifestyle
modifications. Weight loss, exercise and healthy eating habits are the main tools to fight
NAFLD. Nevertheless, there is no a well characterized dietary pattern and further studies
are necessary.
With this background, the general aim of this project is to increase the knowledge on the
influence of nutritional/lifestyle interventions in obese patients with NAFLD, as well as
contribute to identify non-invasive biomarkers/scores to early diagnosis of this pathology
in future obese people.
This project is framed within the promotion of health and lifestyles and, specifically, in
liver disorder linked to obesity (FLiO: Fatty Liver in Obesity).
The investigation addresses a randomized, parallel, long-term personalized nutritional
intervention with two strategies: 1) Control diet based on American Heart Association (AHA);
2) Fatty Liver in Obesity (FLiO) diet based on previous results (RESMENA project).The diet
is based on macronutrient distribution, quality and quantity, and is characterized by a low
glycemic load, high adherence to the Mediterranean diet and a high antioxidant capacity,
with the inclusion of anti-inflammatory foods. It also takes into account the distribution
of food throughout the day, number of meals, portion sizes, timing of meal, individual
needs, dietary behavior (behavioral therapy: eat slowly, teach what to buy, what to eat,
when to eat). The participants are instructed to follow this strategy. This strategy
(RESMENA) was even more effective than AHA after 6 months follow-up, in terms of significant
reduction of abdominal fat and blood glucose level. In addition, this diet had beneficial
effects for participants who were obese and had values of altered glucose, reducing
significantly in RESMENA participants LDL-oxidized marker. These results are very important
to apply in the present investigation since that patients with NAFLD are commonly insulin
resistant.
Both strategies were designed within a hypocaloric dietary pattern (-30%) in order to
achieve the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) recommendations for
the management of non-alcoholic liver disease (loss of at least 3-5% of body weight appears
necessary to improve steatosis, but a greater weight loss, up to 10%, may be needed to
improve necroinflammation). At this time the participants are individually supervised and
encouraged to follow with the dietary planning instructions assigned. Furthermore, at
baseline, 6, 12 and 24 months anticipated variables are obtained. Both dietary groups
receive routine control (weight, body composition, strategy adherence) and dietary advice
daily by phone (if they need help) and face to face at the time of routine control.
In order to get a integral lifestyle intervention, all participants will be encouraged to
follow a healthy lifestyle. Thus, physical activity will be recorded in each dietary group.
The specific tasks:
1. To recruit and select patients with the adequate characteristics to validate the
conclusions reached.
2. To develop and adequately transmit to each patient a personalized strategy according to
the group randomly assigned ( AASLD vs FLiO strategy).
3. To check the degree of adherence to the strategy set by regular monitoring:
semiquantitative questionnaires of food consumption frequency, pedometers,
accelerometers, weight control, satiety.
4. To assess the effect of each strategy on body composition (weight, waist circumference,
body fat, muscle mass, bone mineral density), physical status, general biochemistry
(lipid profile, glycaemic profile, albumin, blood count, transaminases), specific
biomarkers/metabolites in blood or urine (inflammation, oxidative stress, liver damage,
appetite, psychological status), quality of life and related factors (anxiety,
depression and sleep).
5. To check the evolution of the liver damage, using non-invasive techniques (ultrasound,
elastography and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), metabolomics analysis) and
calculating different validated liver scores from the data obtained with each strategy.
6. To compare the effectiveness of strategies, considering not only the ability to
decrease body fat, but also other risk factors present in the NAFLD patient such as
insulin resistance and cardiovascular risk, which will result in improvement of liver
damage.
7. To analyze SNPs (DNA from oral epithelial cells) and the association with NAFLD
(diagnosis and response to the strategies).
8. To study gene expression (mRNAs) and microRNAs in white blood cells for identifying
biomarkers of diagnosis and response to dietary strategy.
9. To analyze gene DNA methylation patterns in white blood cells for identifying
biomarkers of diagnosis and response to dietary strategy.
10. To describe the intestinal microbiota composition by 16s sequencing at baseline and
after nutritional intervention for diagnosis and response.
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