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Effect of Dietary SFA and Fructose on Hepatic Insulin Sensitivity

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC) logo

Maastricht University Medical Centre (MUMC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Insulin Resistance

Treatments

Other: High fructose diet
Other: High saturated fat diet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05017675
NL78281.068.21

Details and patient eligibility

About

High rates of de novo lipogenesis (DNL) and high saturated fatty acid (SFA) fraction in the liver both have been associated with poor metabolic health and hepatic insulin resistance. Interestingly, the end product of DNL is mainly SFA. So far it is unknown whether it is the process of DNL or the accumulation of SFA per se that leads to hepatic insulin resistance. Therefore, it is of interest to compare the effect of a diet that modifies directly hepatic SFA content (4-week high SFA diet) and a diet that changes SFA indirectly by modifying rates of DNL (4-week high fructose diet). To this end, 18 overweight/obese, but otherwise healthy, males and females will take part in the randomized dietary interventions. The primary outcome is hepatic insulin sensitivity (suppression of EGP during clamp) upon a 4-week high SFA diet versus a 4-week fructose diet.

Full description

Rationale: High rates of de novo lipogenesis (DNL) and high saturated fatty acid (SFA) fraction in the liver both have been associated with poor metabolic health and hepatic insulin resistance. Interestingly, the end product of DNL is mainly SFA. So far it is unknown whether it is the process of DNL or the accumulation of SFA per se that leads to hepatic insulin resistance. This is a clinically relevant question, as it will give novel insights towards the best strategy for prevention and treatment of hepatic insulin resistance. Therefore, it is of interest to compare the effect of a diet that modifies directly hepatic SFA content (high SFA diet) and a diet that changes SFA indirectly by modifying rates of DNL (high fructose diet).

Objective: To determine the effect of a 4-week high SFA diet compared to a 4-week high fructose diet on hepatic insulin sensitivity, on hepatic SFA fraction and DNL.

Study design: This is a randomized intervention study comparing the effects of a 4-week high SFA diet compared to a 4-week high fructose diet on hepatic insulin sensitivity.

Study population: 24 overweight/obese, but otherwise healthy, males and females (BMI 27-38 kg/m2), 45-75 years, will participate in the study. Of these 24 included participants, 18 are expected to meet the study criteria and take part in the measurements following the screening, of these 14 need to complete the study.

Intervention: Participants follow a 4-week high SFA diet and a 4-week high fructose diet.

Main study parameters/endpoints: The primary outcome is hepatic insulin sensitivity (suppression of EGP during clamp) upon a 4-week high SFA diet versus a 4-week fructose diet. Secondary outcomes are DNL upon 4-week high SFA versus 4-week high fructose, and delta (baseline-end intervention) hepatic SFA fraction upon 4-week high SFA versus 4-week high fructose.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

45 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participants are able to provide signed and dated written informed consent prior to any study specific procedures
  • Participants should have suitable veins for cannulation or repeated venipuncture
  • Women are post-menopausal (defined as at least 1 year post cessation of menses)
  • Aged ≥ 45 and ≤ 75 years
  • Body mass index (BMI) 27 - 38 kg/m2
  • Stable dietary habits (no weight loss or gain >5kg in the past 3 months)
  • Sedentary lifestyle (not more than 2 hours of sports per week)
  • No signs of active cardiovascular disease, liver or kidney malfunction
  • Liver fat content ≥ 2% weight/weight.

Exclusion criteria

  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Previous enrolment in a clinical study with an investigational product during the last 3 months or as judged by the Investigator
  • Patients with congestive heart failure and and/or severe renal and or liver insufficiency or another condition that may interfere with outcomes measured in this study.
  • Any contra-indication MRI scanning
  • Alcohol consumption of >2 servings per day for men and >1 servings per day for woman
  • Smoking in the past 6 months
  • Men: Hb <8.4 mmol/L, Women: Hb <7.8 mmol/l
  • Vegetarian, vegan, food intolerant to common foods (e.g. gluten intolerant, lactose intolerant)
  • Medication use that may influence outcome parameters

A medical doctor will judge participation eligibility based on the medical history questionnaire, medication use and fasting blood parameters. If the medical doctor advises that a volunteer cannot participate, the volunteer will be excluded from enrollment.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

20 participants in 2 patient groups

High fructose diet
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive dietary products high in fructose for 4 weeks.
Treatment:
Other: High fructose diet
High saturated fat diet
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive dietary products high in saturated fat for 4 weeks.
Treatment:
Other: High saturated fat diet

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Kay Roumans; Vera Schrauwen-Hinderling, Dr

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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