Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Clinical Effects of Nutrition on Metabolic Risk Factors and Mechanisms
The overall aim for this study is to evaluate the clinical effects of a modified diet on
metabolic risk factors such as diabetes mellitus and obesity, and the mechanisms this
nutrition composition exerts on gastrointestinal physiology, inflammatory responses, and
quality of life, where the subjects are their own controls.
Within this study, the investigators will be able to relate the nutritional composition to
metabolic disorders, the gut microbiota, secreted intestinal neuropeptides, and bio- and
inflammatory markers in serum, plasma and urine.
Material and Methods
Subjects are recruited consequently from the primary care, and from the Department of
Endocrinology.
Study population
The investigator will include:
1. patients with type 2 diabetes to study the effect of a modified diet for 3 months;
2. healthy volunteers for intake of two different breakfasts with some days in between the
meals.
All categories will be exposed to exactly the same study design.
Protocols:
Various protocols will be used in the study, to collect information about the status at
inclusion, and to be able to measure changes in anthropometry, health status and symptoms
during the study period.
Study-questionnaire:
This questionnaire is similar to the questionnaires used in the great population cohorts
Malmö Diet and Cancer Study (MDCS, general population from Malmö, N = 28 000), and Malmö
Offspring Study (MOS) (general population from Malmö, children and grandchildren to
participants in MDCS, calculated to include 5000 participants, started 2013, supported by
grants from VR). It is also used in a newly started endoscopy study where all consecutive
patients performing a colonoscopy at the Department of Gastroenterology in Malmö will be
included (calculated to include 2000 participants). The questionnaire contains questions
about socioeconomic factors, life style factors (including diet, smoking, stuff use, alcohol
habits, physical activity), medical health, drug consumption, heredity factors and
gastrointestinal symptoms.
Nutrition questionnaire:
This questionnaire is used to get information about ordinary diet, energy intake, and so on.
This basic information is used to plan the diet from Life Science Lab, so similar energy
supply and breakfast are provided.
36-item Short-Form questionnaire (SF-36): This is a world-wide used instrument to evaluate
quality of life. It has been used to measure quality of life in many various diseases, and
norm value references are available. The instrument measures physical functioning, role
functional-physical, bodily pain, general health, vitality, social functioning, role
functioning-emotional, and mental health. These parameters are valuable to evaluate, to
estimate the effects evoked in daily life, by a change in life style factors.
Anthropometric protocol:
This questionnaire is used to screen the study participants before inclusion, and to be able
to exclude patients with already ongoing weight-reducing diet. In addition, it contains
questions about BMI, body composition, and a basal physical examination.
Satiety scoring:
This protocol has been used in previous studies by the group, to estimate the degree of
hunger/satiety before and after a standardized meal.
Nutrition:
All subjects will get the diet delivered free from charge from Life Science Lab (Lund
University). Life Science Lab was founded 1998 as a leading medical and technical research
for advanced cardiovascular and thoracic surgery sciences. Due to the importance of life
style effects on the cardiovascular diseases and well-being, Life Science Lab also conducts
life style-related science to reduce known risk factors for cardiovascular diseases. The main
focus is to develop healthy nutrition in normal food formula by reforming the food-meal
composition for everyone. The meal-diet consists of ordinary raws, but with minimal
industrial processing. The food is based on traditional Nordic raws, e.g. whole grains,
vegetables, leguminous, root crops, fat fish, birds, fruits, berries and nuts. At the same
time, the amount of sugar, read meat, processed meat, and dairy products is limited. The diet
has a good nutritional supply, but contains less calories than what is usually recommended
(2000 kcal/day compared with 2400 kcal/day).
The meal is planned together with the kitchen of Life science Lab. Food composition, recipes,
and instructions how to cook the food is delivered regularly from Life Science Lab for lunch
and dinner. The breakfasts for the subjects are planned together with the PI and the
nutritionist at Life Science Lab, but the subjects have to buy the food themselves. Three
alternatives are suggested, depending on their ordinary breakfast ingested, described in the
nutrition questionnaire.
Neuropeptides/inflammatory markers:
The neuropeptides, or their precursors, that will be studied in serum/plasma are peptides
involved in regulation of satiety and digestion, e.g. cholecystokinin (CCK), gastrin,
ghrelin, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), and glucagon-like peptide-2 (GLP-2), leptin,
motilin, neurotensin, oxytocin, and peptide YY (PYY). To evaluate permeability defects in the
intestinal mucosa, levels of zonulin and bacterial endotoxins, i.e. lipopolysaccharides, will
be measured in plasma. Low-graded inflammation is reflected by high-sensitive C-reactive
protein (CRP), plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1), and factors involved in AGE
will be analyzed. In addition, different cytokines, tracers, and routine analyses will be
performed. Cooperation with laboratories in Denmark and Great Britain will be established.
Gut microbiota:
DNA extractions and Terminal Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (T-RFLP) and
quantification of specific bacterial groups will be done by quantitative polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) in accordance with the protocols the investigator has used and described
earlier by the research group. As reference, a restricted number of samples will be analyzed
with massively-parallel pyrosequencing of partial ribosomal ribonucleic acid (rRNA) ribosomal
genes. The gut microbiota bacterial constitution (bacterial species) will be correlated to
gastrointestinal symptoms and diseases, and changes in bio- and inflammatory markers.
Study Design
When a group of patients are recruited, the investigator will have an information meeting for
the whole group. At that meeting, held by the PI, the subjects will receive medical
information about metabolic diseases, and about nutrition and its effects on health and
disease.
After this initial meeting, the subjects are handled individually. For overview, se
flow-chart, last page. At inclusion, all subjects have to complete questionnaires and some
examinations:
1. Study-questionnaire containing questions about ordinary lifestyle factors, socioeconomic
factors, health- and drug information, heredity, and gastrointestinal symptoms;
2. Nutrition questionnaire containing information about ordinary food habits
3. Quality of life questionnaire SF-36;
4. Anthropometric protocol, including nutritional screening, completed by the investigator;
and
5. Eight tubes (SST- phenolsulfotransferase platelet survival time (PST)- and
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) tubes), à 6 ml, to collect serum, plasma and
blood cells. Feces sampling for microbiota analyses. Urine sampling during the night.
All biological material will be stored at -20 ◦C or -80◦ C for later analyses, or
analyzed at once (Hb, leukocytes, thrombocytes, CRP, electrolytes, liver enzymes,
lipids, bleeding status, glomerular filtration rate (GFR), insulin, fp-glucose, HbA1c
and thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), cobalamin, folate and routine urine analyses incl
microalbuminuria).
The questionnaires 1, 3, 4, and 5, and experimental procedures will be repeated after 3
months of the diet and at termination after 6 months, with standard food the last 3 months.
Two weeks after introduction of the new diet, insulin, glucose and proinsulin are measured in
plasma/serum, along with anthropometric protocol.
During the evaluation of the diet, the subjects have to continue with the same degree of
physical activity as previously. No dietary supplements such as fish oil, probiotics or
multivitamin drugs are allowed to take. As most one visit to a restaurant or to another diet
per week is allowed. Journeys or a stay during a longer time period at another place must be
discussed with the leader of the research. Maximal intake of alcoholic beverages is 30 g
ethanol/week. 12 g ethanol corresponds to the following: 1 bottle (50cl) ordinary beer, 1
bottle (33cl) strong beer, 1 glass (15cl) wine, 1 glass (8cl) strong wine, or 1 glass (4cl)
spirits. formula: volume% x ml volume/100 x 0.8.
Test meal in a substudy of healthy volunteers
The subjects come fasting (12 h) in the morning, bringing the breakfast to consume. Before
starting the meal, two blood samples are taken with 10 min in between. After the start of the
meal, a new blood sample is collected at 10, 20, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, and 180 min afterwards.
Each blood sample consists of 6 ml plasma. At the same time intervals, the satiety score is
completed. With a few days in between, the same procedure is performed where their previous
ordinary, daily breakfast is replaced by the new diet, so that 2 test meals are performed
during run-in; one with ordinary breakfast and one with new diet breakfast.
During the whole study, PI has a close contact (email and phone) with the patient to be able
to support the patient and enhance compliance as much as possible.
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