Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02604316
Other study ID # 2/063/13
Secondary ID 289800R&D
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received March 26, 2015
Last updated May 3, 2017
Start date January 2014
Est. completion date December 2016

Study information

Verified date September 2016
Source University of Aberdeen
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

The proposed study will address the effect of developed novel food products through processing innovation on motivation to eat, biomarkers of satiety, nutrient bioavailability and gut health using in vivo studies and validating new in vivo approaches.

Specifically in this protocol the investigators will address, in a short human intervention study the effect of a potentially satiating product on appetite, appetite biomarkers, particularly the influence on gut microbiota, tolerance and safety of the products in healthy obese and overweight participants in free living conditions.


Description:

Previous research has suggested that food structure and food composition has a role to play in controlling consumption. Low-energy, high-fibre diets provide physical bulk in the gastro-intestinal tract to sustain fullness in a way that low-volume, energy-dense foods cannot. However, studies shown low long term acceptability be probably associated to its poor palatability. Taste and hedonic experience remain the main drivers of consumer choice, and the immediate sensory aspect of food products such as palatability to have greater salience to consumers than their health promoting properties.

Changing the properties of foods merely by changing oro-sensory properties and through the delay of gastric emptying deals with mechanisms critical to within-meal satiation and early post meal satiety and may produce only transient suppression of hunger unless regularly consumed and represent benefits in delivering nutritional stimuli to key parts of the gastro-intestinal tract. The potential to manufacture change can make food structure variety now seem near limitless due the numerous advances in food technology.

Several recent reports have associated satiety effects with fermentable fibre sources in human dietary studies. Apparently, the large intestine microbiota recovers 'extra' calories from the diet and might contributes to obesity. However, the different mechanisms involved in lean and obese subjects are not completely resolved. Recent evidence in experimental animal designs indicates that changes in gut microbiota composition may be associated with increased food intake and obesity suggesting that satiety and intake are influenced by the species composition of the gut microbiota.

This short-term human nutrition study comprises in a randomised, cross-over design testing either two potentially satiety product, Arabinoxylan (A) or Beta-glucan (B) against an equivalent amount of heterogeneous natural fibre (Control) in 40 healthy-obese volunteers, aged 18-65 years old, BMI between 27 and 42Kg/m2 from both genders after an initial maintenance diet in free- living conditions.

Dietary intake, body weight, blood pressure would be monitored through the study. Faecal, urine and blood samples will be collected to monitor, glucose, insulin, gut peptides and assess metabolites of dietary and microbial origin. Orocecal Transit Time (OCTT), carbohydrate fermentability and methanogen status will be estimated using a breath test and transit time will be determined using SmartPill™.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 40
Est. completion date December 2016
Est. primary completion date December 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years to 65 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Males and females

- 18-65 years old

- Body Mass Index (BMI) 27-42kg/m2

- Overall healthy

- Weight Stable (<3 kg change in the past 4 months, before the trial).

Exclusion Criteria:

- Medical:

- Heavy smokers (more than 10 cigarettes/day) or heavy alcohol consumers (more than 4 alcohol units/day for male and more than 3 alcohol units/day for female).

- Obesity of endocrine origin.

- Chronic metabolic conditions: diabetes, hepatic disease, gout, kidney, thyroid or coagulation disease.

- Gastrointestinal disorders: celiac disease, Intenstinal Bowel Disease (IBD), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), chronic constipation, diverticulitis, history of gastric bezoar. Suspected strictures, fistulas, or physiological GI obstruction.

- Psychiatric disorder: severe depression, bulimia, anorexia, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder.

- Gastrointestinal procedure or surgery in the past three months.

- Disorders of swallowing, severe dysphagia to food or pills.

- Pregnancy

Medication exclusion criteria

- Appetite modulator drugs: orlistat, sibutramine, rimonabant.

- Mood disorder medications: antidepressants, lithium.

- Others: oral antidiabetics, insulin, digoxin, thyroid hormones, antibiotics, steroids or immunosuppressants, recreational substances.

- Use of implanted or portable electro-mechanical device such as cardiac peacemaker or infusion pump.

- Blood donor in the past 3 months.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Arabinoxylan
10 days of weight loss diet calculated as 100% RMR + 15g Arabinoxylan (Medium Chain Naxus, BioActor b.v., Netherlands) per day in incremental dose 25% according energy requirement, 30% protein, 30% fat, 40% carbohydrate.
Beta- Glucan
10 days of weight loss diet calculated as 100% RMR + 6g ß-glucan (Viscofibre, Naturex SA, France) per day in incremental dose 25% according energy requirement, 30% protein, 30% fat, 40%

Locations

Country Name City State
United Kingdom Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health. University of Aberdeen Aberdeen

Sponsors (18)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Aberdeen Axxam S.p.A., BioActor, Cargill, Centro Tecnológico Nacional Agroalimentario Extremadura, Centro Tecnológico Nacional de la Conserva y Alimentación, Juver Alimentación S.L.U, Karolinska Institutet, Københavns Universitet, Naturex, Spain, NIZO Food Research, ProDigest, RTD Services Vienna, The Coca-Cola Company, Universidad de Murcia, University of Leeds, University of Liverpool, University Rovira i Virgili

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United Kingdom, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Effect of Arabinoxylan or Beta- Glucan on weight loss and body composition During this part of the study the effect of novel fibre of 3 dietary interventions subsequent each other: Maintenance (3 days), Arabinoxylan or Beta glucan per 10 days and Control diet per 10 days. Weight loss will be assessed after dietary intervention. Changes on body weight, BMI and total and regional body composition information using a two compartment model (fat mass and fat free mass by air displacement densitometry -Bod-Pod) will be assessed at the end of each dietary intervention. Resting Metabolic Rate will be assessed the beginning and at the end of the weight loss diet (Deltatrac). 72 hours
Secondary Effect of Arabinoxylan or Beta- Glucan on gut health The effect of a novel fibre on gut health: Gut microbiota, short chain fatty acids production.
To assess metabolites of dietary and microbial origin including short chain fatty acid. Bacterial community structure will be assessed by targeted quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR), high throughput 454 sequencing (Walker et al., ISME J 2010) and 4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) staining to estimate total bacteria. Gut transit will be assessed once at the end of each diet using a wireless motility device (SmartPill™). Only 4 volunteers will receive this assessment during the last 5 days of each maintenance period.
Questionnaires will be provided to monitor qualitatively gastrointestinal wellbeing during each dietary intervention.
23 days
See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Not yet recruiting NCT03994419 - PErioperAtive CHildhood ObesitY
Recruiting NCT05354245 - Using a Complex Carbohydrate Mixture to Steer Fermentation and Improve Metabolism in Adults With Overweight and Prediabetes (DISTAL) N/A
Completed NCT03602001 - Attentive Eating for Weight Loss N/A
Recruiting NCT06269159 - The Power of 24-hour: Co-designing Intervention Components
Completed NCT03377244 - Healthy Body Healthy Souls in the Marshallese Population N/A
Completed NCT02996864 - Location-based Smartphone Technology to Guide College Students Healthy Choices Ph II N/A
Completed NCT04647149 - Effects of Early and Delayed Time-restricted Eating in Adults With Overweight and Obesity N/A
Terminated NCT03914066 - A Group-based Treatment of Overweight and Obesity in Primary Care N/A
Completed NCT03685656 - Effect of ANACA3 Slimming Gel on Loss of Abdominal and Thigh Circumferences in Healthy Volunteers N/A
Completed NCT05051579 - A Study of LY3502970 in Participants With Obesity or Overweight With Weight-related Comorbidities Phase 2
Completed NCT04611477 - Effect of Synbiotic 365 on Body Composition in Overweight and Obese Individuals N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT05330247 - Cut Down on Carbohydrate in the Dietary Therapy of Type 2 Diabetes - The Meal Box Study N/A
Completed NCT03599115 - Effects of Inhibitory Control Training in Eating Behaviors N/A
Recruiting NCT05938894 - Train Your Brain - Executive Function N/A
Recruiting NCT06094231 - Treating Patients With Renal Impairment and Altered Glucose MetAbolism With TherapeutIc Carbohydrate Restriction and Sglt2-Inhibiton - a Pilot Study N/A
Recruiting NCT05987306 - A Self-compassion Focused Intervention for Internalized Weight Bias and Weight Loss N/A
Completed NCT03792685 - Looking for Personalized Nutrition for Obesity/Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Prevention N/A
Completed NCT05055362 - Effect a Honey, Spice-blended Baked Good Has on Salivary Inflammation Markers in Adults: a Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT04520256 - Rapid Evaluation of Innovative Intervention Components to Maximize the Health Benefits of Behavioral Obesity Treatment Delivered Online: An Application of Multiphase Optimization Strategy Phase 2/Phase 3
Completed NCT04979234 - A Single Centre, Prospective Feasibility Study to Evaluate the Efficacy of an Endoluminal-suturing Device (Endomina) on Severe Obstructive Sleep Apnea Syndrome N/A

External Links