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The objective of this study is to demonstrate that an < or equal to 8-hour time-restricted eating (i.e., fasting for at least 16 hours every day), not focusing on reducing caloric intake, reduces intra-hepatic fat in patients with obesity and Metabolic dysfunction-Associated Steatotic liver Disease (MASLD).
Full description
Obesity is a growing health problem. The increase in obesity is driving the growing prevalence of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD, formerly called non-alcoholic fatty liver disease or NAFLD).
Chronobiology has revealed new risk factors for metabolic disease including MASLD. Proof-of-concept studies showed that time-restricted eating (TRE), a dietary intervention that involves longer fasting periods (typically > 12 h per day) without caloric restriction, reprograms metabolism favorably. The state of the art now justifies clinical trials on clinical populations.
The aim of this randomized, parallel group, controlled study is to test the efficacy of Time Restricted Eating (TRE) implemented with dietary coaching and a dedicated mobile application compared to usual care. The primary endpoint is the evolution of liver fat content quantified by Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
Patients presenting all inclusion criteria without non-inclusion ciriteria will be included and a Magnetic Resonnance Imaging of the liver will be programmed. Randomization will be performed within 3 months post inclusion after MRI results are obtained. Only patients showing Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Proton Density Fat Fraction (MRI-PDFF) > or equal to 8% will be randomized. Other patients will be withdrawn from study before randomization.
After randomization, both groups will benefit from the standard of care for obesity management and metabolic assessment. Both groups will benefit from dietary counselling to achieve a balanced diet (no calorie restriction) and increase physical activity as recommended. This counselling will be performed by weekly phone calls of a centralized dietetician during a period of 12 weeks. Both groups of patients will use a mobile application to daily register time of first food intake and of time of last food intake (through time-stamped photos of first and last feedings). This will allow to know length of the patient's eating period per 24 hours.
Difference between the 2 groups of patients is only that, in the experimental arm (TRE), patients will additionnaly be instructed to reduce time of daily food intake to a window of 8 hours per day or less and thus increase daily fasting to at least 16 hours. This coaching will be performed during the weekly phone calls of a centralized dietetician.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Alcohol intake > 20 g/day
Night-shift workers or rotating shift workers
Smoking
Patient with diabetes if HbA1c not at target (<7%) and/or using a non-authorized medication)
Chronic liver disease other than MASLD
Severe hepatic disease (cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma)
Severe cardiac disease (Chronic heart failure classified as being in New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class III or IV)
Severe Kidney disease with CKD-EPI<30 mL/min/1,73m2
Initiation of hormonal treatment during the study period
Medications affecting weight or energy balance
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) not possible due to patient's anthropometric characteristics. Any of the following:
MRI not possible due to the following (an MRI safety screening form will have to be filled for inclusion): presence of a pacemaker or cardiac defibrillator or cardiovascular catheter or neurostimulator or an implantable electronic pump for automated drug injection or an electronically-controlled implantable chamber. Ocular metallic foreign bodies
History of severe eating disorders: Binge Eating Disorder, Bulimia Nervosa; Night eating syndrome
Minors
Adults under guardianship, trusteeship or under safeguard of justice
Other clinical trial participation that could interfere with the study
Pregnant women or women trying to be pregnant
Nursing mothers
Any treatment triggering hepatic steatosis
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
72 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
David JACOBI, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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