Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Other |
Glucose |
Glucose is a sugar that circulates in the blood and is used as an energy source for many cells. Glucose will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood glucose regulation. Glucose is measured in units of mg/dL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
Insulin |
Insulin is a hormone that helps control blood glucose concentration. Insulin will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood glucose regulation. Insulin is measured in units of microIU/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
c-peptide |
c-peptide is a peptide that is formed during the production of insulin. C-peptide will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting insulin response and blood glucose regulation. c-peptide is measured in units of ng/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
Glucagon |
Glucagon is a hormone that helps control blood glucose concentration. Glucagon will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood glucose regulation. Glucagon is measured in units of pg/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) |
GLP-1 is a hormone that helps control blood glucose concentration. GLP-1 will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood glucose regulation. GLP-1 is measured in units of pg/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
Anandamide |
Anandamide is the precursor of a class of physiologically active substances which are involved in brain chemistry. Anandamide will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood compounds that are associated with reward. Anandamide is measured in units of ng/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
2-arachidonyl glycerol (2-AG) |
2-AG is the precursor of a class of physiologically active substances which are involved in brain chemistry. 2-AG will be measured to determine how the treatment is affecting blood compounds that are associated with reward. 2-AG is measured in units of ng/mL. |
Baseline (Month 1) week 3 or 4, Months 2-4, Month 6 |
|
Other |
Sweet taste receptors genotype |
Genotyping describes the genetic make-up. The known variants of sweet receptor subunit TAS1R3 will be genotyped. Genotype will be measured as a specific sequence of the nucleobases cytosine, guanine, adenine and thymine. |
Baseline month (once) |
|
Other |
Body weight |
Body weight is the mass of a person. Body weight is measured wearing street clothes without shoes or other heavy items in the pockets. Body weight is used to adjust energy intake to maintain weight maintenance. Body weight is measured in kg. |
Baseline, Months 2-4 M-F, Month 6 at end of study |
|
Other |
Waist circumference |
Waist circumference is the distance around an individual at a specific location. Waist circumference is measured in cm. |
Screening and Month 6 at end of study |
|
Other |
Blood pressure |
Blood pressure is a measure of the pressure produced by the heart on the walls of the blood vessels at different times during the heartbeat. Blood pressure is measured in mm Hg (mercury). |
Screening and Month 6 at end of study |
|
Other |
Power of Food Scale |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. There are 15 items on the questionnaire. Each item is recorded as a 5-point Likert scale with a value of 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 corresponding to "I don't agree", "I agree a little", "I agree somewhat", "I agree quite a bit, and "I strongly agree". A total score is determined as the sum of the responses. None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Emotional Eating Scale |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. There are 25 items on the questionnaire. Each item is recorded as a 5-point Likert scale with a value of 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 corresponding to "no desire to eat", "a small desire to eat", "a moderate desire to eat", "a strong urge to eat", or "an overwhelming urge to eat." A total score is determined as the sum of the responses. None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Three Factor Eating Questionnaire |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Yale Food Addiction Scale |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. There are 16 items on the questionnaire that are scored as a 5-point Likert scale with a value of 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4, corresponding to "never", "once a month", "2-4 times a month", "2-3 times a week", or "4 or more times or daily." There is 1 item on the questionnaire that is scored as a 5-point Likert scale with a value of 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4, corresponding to "1 or fewer times", "2 times", "3 times", "4 times", or "5 or more times." There are 8 items scored as "no" (0) or "yes" (1). A total score is determined as the sum of the responses. None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Barrat Impulsiveness Scale |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. There are 11 items on the questionnaire that are scored as a 4-point Likert scale with a value of 1, 2, 3, or 4 corresponding to "rarely/never", "occasionally", "often", or "almost always/always." A total score is determined as the sum of the responses. None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Baseline and Month 6 end of study |
|
Other |
Dietary Satisfaction Questionnaire |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. |
Baseline, weekly during Months 3-5, and Month 6 end of intervention |
|
Other |
Food Craving Inventory |
A questionnaire that measures factors related to food preference and eating behavior. |
Baseline, weekly during Months 3-5, and Month 6 end of intervention |
|
Primary |
Taste intensity of food |
Rating taste intensity from barely detectable to strong using a general labeled magnitude scale. The name of the scale is the general labeled magnitude scale. The value of the response is recorded on the scale as "barely detectable", "weak", "moderate, strong", "very strong", and "strongest imaginable sensation of any kind." None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Month 1 |
|
Primary |
Taste intensity of food |
Rating taste intensity from barely detectable to strong using a general labeled magnitude scale. The name of the scale is the general labeled magnitude scale. The value of the response is recorded on the scale as "barely detectable", "weak", "moderate, strong", "very strong", and "strongest imaginable sensation of any kind." None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Month 2 |
|
Primary |
Taste intensity of food |
Rating taste intensity from barely detectable to strong using a general labeled magnitude scale. The name of the scale is the general labeled magnitude scale. The value of the response is recorded on the scale as "barely detectable", "weak", "moderate, strong", "very strong", and "strongest imaginable sensation of any kind." None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Month 3 |
|
Primary |
Taste intensity of food |
Rating taste intensity from barely detectable to strong using a general labeled magnitude scale. The name of the scale is the general labeled magnitude scale. The value of the response is recorded on the scale as "barely detectable", "weak", "moderate, strong", "very strong", and "strongest imaginable sensation of any kind." None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Month 4 |
|
Primary |
Taste intensity of food |
Rating taste intensity from barely detectable to strong using a general labeled magnitude scale. The name of the scale is the general labeled magnitude scale. The value of the response is recorded on the scale as "barely detectable", "weak", "moderate, strong", "very strong", and "strongest imaginable sensation of any kind." None of these responses is considered better or worse than any other. |
Month 6 |
|
Primary |
Taste preference |
Most liked concentration. Foods will be scaled as g flavor/100 g food. |
Month 1 |
|
Primary |
Taste preference |
Most liked concentration. Foods will be scaled as g flavor/100 g food. |
Month 2 |
|
Primary |
Taste preference |
Most liked concentration. Foods will be scaled as g flavor/100 g food. |
Month 3 |
|
Primary |
Taste preference |
Most liked concentration. Foods will be scaled as g flavor/100 g food. |
Month 4 |
|
Primary |
Taste preference |
Most liked concentration. Foods will be scaled as g flavor/100 g food. |
Month 6 |
|
Secondary |
Diet-related adverse events |
Adverse events related to the diet tabulated by study-arm and severity. |
Daily during the Baseline (Month 1), Months 2-6 |
|
Secondary |
Diet-related early discontinuation from intervention |
Subject withdraws citing issues with the study diet, or investigators withdraw the subject from the study due to concerns over how the subject reacts to the study diet. |
Daily during the Baseline (Month 1), Months 2-6 |
|