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About
Background:
- Studies show that many factors affect children's eating behavior and health. These include sleep, mood, thinking skills, and genetics. Studying children over time may identify children at higher risk for eating-related health concerns.
Objective:
- To understand how genes and environment influence eating behavior and health over time.
Eligibility:
- Children ages 8-17 in good general health.
Design:
Participants will be compensated for the time and inconvenience involved with completing study procedures.
Full description
This study aims to disentangle the varying disinhibited eating patterns, or eating behavior endophenotypes, that lead to excessive weight gain and obesity-related comorbidities in youth. Extensive baseline evaluations, including three separate experimental paradigms, and annual follow-up assessments will assist with identifying biopsychosocial mechanisms that appear to increase risk for, and maintain, these eating behaviors and lead to weight gain. Illumination of early risk factors for specific eating behavior endophenotypes and their associated health outcomes will inform the development of targeted interventions for pediatric obesity. Participants for the current study will include 500 healthy obese and non-obese boys and girls (8 to 17yo at baseline) and their parents/caregivers. Youth will first complete two visits in order to ensure study eligibility and to evaluate self-regulatory, motivational, and neurocognitive factors that appear to be salient to the development and maintenance of disinhibited eating behavior, including: psychological distress, sleep behavior, food reinforcement, reward sensitivity, executive functioning, attention bias, and a range of related genetic and physiological factors. Eating behavior will be observed in the laboratory using several validated paradigms. For two weeks, participants will monitor their sleep using wrist actigraphy, as well as record their mood, eating behavior, and eating cognitions using smart phones (via ecological momentary assessment methods). Youth will then be invited to complete up to three separate experimental paradigms designed to further elucidate cognitive, emotional, and physiological processes associated with disinhibited eating behavior. All participants will then complete annual evaluations of weight and adiposity for a total of six years, with more extensive evaluations of self-regulatory, motivational and neurocognitive functioning every three years. Studying children and adolescents longitudinally will allow for examination of the independent and shared risk factors for pediatric disinhibited eating and excess weight. Data from these evaluations will not only be used to test specific hypotheses, but will also be hypothesis-generating in that they will inform the development of additional empirical questions and subsequent experiments. Thus, the current protocol will offer the flexibility to examine potentially critical contributions to weight gain in children as they continue their biopsychosocial development.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Parents/Guardians will qualify if they meet the following criteria.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Parents/Guardians will be excluded for the following reasons:
If their child is not eligible to participate in the study (see below)
If they are believed by the medical study team to have a medical or psychiatric problem that will not allow them to complete study procedures safely (these will be determined on a case-by-case basis)
Eligibility Criteria for Child Participants:
INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Volunteers will qualify if they meet the following criteria.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Individuals will be excluded (and provided treatment referrals as needed) for the following reasons:
Additional exclusions for (optional) stool sample collection include:
Stool Sample only:
In addition, Experiments 1 and 2 have specific additional exclusions:
Experiment 1 only:
Experiment 2 only:
All participants will receive a written explanation of the purposes, procedures, and potential hazards of the study. Communication of this information and of the participant's assent as well as the consent of the parent or guardian will be documented in the medical record and copies of all signed documents given to each family. All participants will be informed of their right to withdraw from the study.
1,500 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Bobby K Cheon
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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