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Dietary Modulation of Hepatic Lipase (LIPC) -514 C/T Variant Associations With Lipids and Glucose

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Tufts University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Impaired Glucose Tolerance
Dyslipidemia

Treatments

Other: High-fat diet
Other: Low-fat diet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02938091
Study 2480

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators evaluated dietary modulation of LIPC rs1800588 (-514 C/T) for lipids and glucose using a randomized cross-over design comparing a high-fat Western diet and a low-fat traditional Hispanic diet in Caribbean Hispanics (n=42; 4 weeks/phase).

Full description

The LIPC -514 C/T single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) has been inconsistently associated with high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) in population studies, supporting the possibility of its modulation by dietary factors. To investigate the interaction between the common LIPC -514(C/T) SNP and dietary fat, the investigators compared changes in lipids and glucose in response to two levels of dietary total fat (20% energy intake vs. 39% energy intake) in a crossover, randomized dietary intervention study enrolling Caribbean Hispanics. Individuals were screened for LIPC rs1800588 genotype prior to enrollment, and genotype-associated differences in response to diet were evaluated.

The study was designed to test the following hypotheses:

  1. Carriers of the T allele consuming a low fat (LF) diet will have decreased hepatic lipase activity as compared with subjects with the CC genotype at the -514(C/T) polymorphism. Conversely, in individuals consuming a high fat (HF) diet, T carriers will exhibit an impaired ability to down regulate hepatic lipase activity.
  2. Based on differences in hepatic lipase activity, the investigators hypothesized that a significant and clinically relevant proportion of the individual variability in fasting plasma HDL-C responses to changes in dietary fat intake would be due to variability at the LIPC locus. Specifically, CC subjects will respond to increases in total dietary fat consumption with significant increases in HDL-C concentration. Conversely, increased fat consumption in T carrying subjects will result in decreased HDL-C concentration.

Enrollment

42 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Self-reported Caribbean Hispanics

Exclusion criteria

  • diabetes
  • uncontrolled hypertension
  • self-reported liver disease; severe kidney dysfunction; angina; endocrine disease; preexisting cardiovascular disease or gallbladder disease, or pancreatitis within the past 12 months
  • use of lipid-lowering or hypoglycemic medications
  • BMI >34 kg/m2
  • alcohol consumption (>2 drinks/day)
  • smoking within the past 6 months or illegal drug use
  • pregnancy or breastfeeding
  • weight gain or loss of more than 9 kg within the past 6 months
  • extreme levels of physical or athletic activity, strict vegetarians/vegans
  • egg, wheat, milk, fish, or nut allergies
  • unwillingness to discontinue fish oil or flaxseed supplements or drinking alcohol during the study
  • travel plans precluding availability for the two 4-week study phases

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

42 participants in 2 patient groups

High-fat diet
Experimental group
Description:
The dietary intervention was designed as a typical Western diet (39% total fat, 14% saturated fat, 12% monounsaturated fat, 9.6% polyunsaturated fat, 42% carbohydrate, 8.8 grams fiber/1000 kcal)
Treatment:
Other: High-fat diet
Low-fat diet
Experimental group
Description:
The dietary intervention consisted of a Hispanic diet (20% total fat, 5.5% saturated fat, 9.6% monounsaturated fat, 3.7% polyunsaturated fat, 61% carbohydrate, 13.7 grams fiber/1000 kcal). The diet was comprised of typical foods and recipes resembling a traditional Caribbean Hispanic diet and differed from the Western diet in four primary ways: 1) more fruits and vegetables, 2) more beans (e.g. mixed dishes to reduce serving size of white rice while increasing legumes), 3) emphasis on reduced-fat dairy products (e.g., 1% fat milk), and 4) lower total fat and lower animal and hydrogenated fat.
Treatment:
Other: Low-fat diet

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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