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Clinical Trial Summary

The dietary shift from animal to plant protein sources is one of the key aspects of the nutritional transition towards more sustainable food system and diets. However the metabolic implication of this shift in protein sources are still poorly understood. This project aims to characterize and understand the metabolic orientations specifically induced by animal and vegetable dietary proteins, in order to better analyze the metabolic reorientations that would result from the expected increase in the share of plant proteins in different dietary contexts, especially those of the Western type, often associated with the development of metabolic deregulations (obesity and cardiometabolic risk).


Clinical Trial Description

The main objectives of this project are: - Characterize the metabolic adaptations induced by animal or plant protein diets and their repercussions in terms of physiology and health. - Characterize the medium-term metabolomic signatures induced by this shift in dietary protein sources - Validate, in a human population, biomarkers of dietary animal or plant proteins, previously identified in pre-clinical studies. This clinical trial is open, monocentric, controlled, randomized, with a cross experimental design. 20 men or postmenopausal women will follow for 4 weeks a controlled diet with a protein fraction constituted mainly from animal or vegetal sources. After a 2-week washout period(+21D/-7D), they will follow another 4 week of controlled diet with predominantly animal or plant protein depending on 1st intervention period diet. At the end of each intervention period, a post-prandial exploration will be conducted with the administration of a high-fat, high-sugar meal and subsequent blood and urine sampling. The order in which participants will received the two diets will be randomized. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04236518
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date August 27, 2020
Completion date August 5, 2022

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