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Effect of KETOgenic Diet on Metabolism, Inflammation, Nutrition Deficiencies and OXidative Stress in Women With Overweight (KETO-MINOX)

P

Polish Academy of Sciences

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Overweight and Obesity

Treatments

Other: Ketogenic diet
Other: Control diet

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05652972
2021/41/B/NZ9/01278

Details and patient eligibility

About

In recent times, the prevalence of obesity increases, reaching an epidemic scale. Elevated body weight is a risk factor in the development of several diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and cancer. Therefore, obesity management solutions, such as diet therapy are needed. The key issue is to choose the most appropriate diet to obtain an efficient outcome in losing weight, without experiencing adverse effects and a decrease in general health. A ketogenic diet, an auxiliary therapy for epilepsy, is recently one of the options commonly used for losing weight by overweight individuals, tempted by the commercials and internet influencers. However, there is limited knowledge about the effect of this diet on human health. To date, the majority of studies were conducted with a very-low-calorie regime applied before the bariatric surgeries, which itself may affect the loss of body weight, and in most studies, the control diets were missing. Taking into consideration that a ketogenic diet is an extremely eliminating diet, there is a risk of nutritional deficiencies after following it. Therefore, there is a strong need for more in-depth and comprehensive elucidation of the safety and physiological effects of the ketogenic diet used for the weight loss in overweight and obese individuals.

This Project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the eight-week, isocaloric, energy-restricted, ketogenic diet as a weight management solution in women with overweight and obesity compared to the standard, balanced diet with the same calorie content.

Full description

In recent times, the prevalence of obesity increases, reaching an epidemic scale. A new factor supporting a weight gain is a current coronaviros (COVID-19) pandemic, associated with reduced physical activity, high stress and overeating, which resulted in 2-5 kg weight gain in 20 % of the American population within a few months 1. Elevated body weight is a risk factor in developing several diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and cancer. Therefore, obesity management solutions, such as diet therapy, are needed. The critical issue is to choose the most appropriate diet to obtain an efficient outcome in losing weight without experiencing adverse effects and a decrease in general health. A ketogenic diet, an auxiliary therapy for epilepsy, is recently one of the options commonly used for losing weight by individuals with overweight, tempted by the commercials and internet influencers. However, there is limited knowledge about the effect of this diet on human health. To date, the majority of studies were conducted with a very low-calorie regime applied before the bariatric surgeries, which itself may affect the loss of body weight. In most studies, the control diets were missing. Considering that a ketogenic diet is an extremely eliminating diet, there is a risk of nutritional deficiencies after following it. Therefore, there is a strong need for more in-depth and comprehensive elucidation of the safety and physiological effects of the energy-restricted ketogenic diet used for weight loss in individuals with overweight and obese.

This Project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of the eight-week, isocaloric, energy-restricted, ketogenic diet as a weight management solution in women with overweight and obesity compared to the standard, balanced diet with the same calorie content.

Enrollment

80 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • women
  • age 18-45
  • overweight (BMI 27 - 35)
  • motivation to lose weight and participate in the nutritional intervention trial

Exclusion criteria

  • overweight/obesity secondary to genetic syndromes
  • endocrine diseases, acute systemic disease, autoimmune disorders
  • pregnancy
  • breastfeeding
  • type 1 and 2 diabetes
  • any other chronic diseases requiring pharmacotherapy (including topical steroids in allergy disorders
  • supplement or medication use influencing appetite, weight or metabolism)
  • participation in other clinical trials
  • severe obesity (BMI > 35)
  • > 3 kg weight loss 12 weeks before the initial test day
  • extreme changes in exercise intensity 4 weeks prior
  • any diagnosed psychiatric disorders

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 2 patient groups

Ketogenic diet
Experimental group
Description:
40 women which will follow the ketogenic diet with 1700 kcal daily for 8 weeks
Treatment:
Other: Ketogenic diet
Control diet
Active Comparator group
Description:
40 women which will follow the standard diet with 1700 kcal daily for 8 weeks
Treatment:
Other: Control diet

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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