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The goal of this randomized controlled trial is to learn how the time of day when calories are eaten affects weight loss in the long-term (12 months). The main aims are to learn:
Researchers will compare whether goals to eat most of a person's calories in the morning or evening work to treat obesity.
Participants will:
Full description
This randomized controlled trial investigates the longer-term (12 months) effect of time-based energy intake goals on weight loss. It also explores whether enhanced appetite regulation is a mediator of the relationship and if chronotype moderates the effect. Adults with overweight or obesity are randomly assigned to one of three, 12-month lifestyle interventions: 1) Morning; 2) Evening; or 3) Standard. All conditions receive a reduced-energy, low-fat dietary prescription (1200-1500 kcal/d, < 30% energy from fat), physical activity goals (> 200 min/wk of moderate- to vigorous-intensity physical activity [MVPA]) and a cognitive behavioral intervention. To minimize the effect of other eating temporal variables on outcomes, guidance on the eating window length and the number of eating occasions in the day are consistent across all three conditions. Thus, the three conditions are instructed to have their first eating occasion < 60 minutes of awakening, and eat their three meals and one snack within a 12-hr eating window. Morning group has time-based energy intake goals of 70% of kcal within the first 6 hrs of the eating window and 30% of kcal within the last 6 hrs of the eating window (a morning-loaded energy distribution). Evening group has the opposite time-based energy intake goals (an afternoon/evening-loaded energy distribution). Standard group receives no guidance on energy intake distribution (standard lifestyle intervention). Assessments occur at 0, 3, 6, and 12 months on anthropometrics, diet (24-hr recalls with time-stamped digital images verifying timing of intake, combined with continuous blood glucose monitoring [CGM] to objectively assess for length of the eating window and number of eating occasions), sleep regularity (actigraphy supported by sleep logs collected via ecological momentary assessment [EMA] using smartphones), appetite regulation assessed via EMA using smartphones, chronotype (self-reported midpoint of sleep on work-free days), and MVPA (actigraphy).
The primary aims are to determine:
The exploratory aims are to consider:
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174 participants in 3 patient groups
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Hollie A Raynor, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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