Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
To better understand how diet influences health during aging, the French National Research Institute for Agriculture, Food and the Environment (INRAE) is working with the Gérontopôle Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes on a project called Part'AGE. Part'AGE is a participatory research project where researchers want to recruit 1,000 people aged between 55 and 75 years, men and women, living in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes in urban or rural areas. The goal is to study eating habits and state of health. To do this, researchers will examine many factors that can influence them, such as physical activity, overall health, consumption patterns or territories. Researchers will collect detailed information to classify participants into different groups (food typologies) based on their eating habits and state of health. With this distribution, the goal is to be able to give each group personalized nutritional advice to age in better health.
To participate in the study, the participants will need to collect a few drops of blood from the end of the finger, a urine sample, and do some tests (mobility, oral health). It will also be necessary to fill out questionnaires on eating habits, physical activity, and other aspects that may influence health. The benefices for to participants will be to contribute to nutrition research and to receive personalized feedback and advices on eating habits.
Full description
The main objective of the study is to characterize the food consumption profile of a population of people aged 55 to 75, men and women, living in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, either in an urban or rural environment. The aim is to classify volunteers into dietary typologies associated with more or less successful aging. Thus, the investigators will classify volunteers into five dietary typologies:
For each of these dietary typologies, the investigators will explore the diversity of: cardio-metabolic capacities; diet; mobility; health status (oral health, intestinal health, stress, fatigue, anxiety, sleep, addictions); the psychological-socio-economic dimension; biological parameters obtained after the collection of biological samples.
This study will be entirely carried out by correspondence, without the volunteers needing to travel. Wide communication on the study will first be carried out in Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes. A phone number and an email address of the research team will be left for people wishing more information. Volunteers will directly contact the administrative agent in charge of selection in order to leave their contact details. The administrative agent will respond or contact the participants in return to present the study in its entirety, tell them about their rights, and check their eligibility. If they are eligible and interested, volunteers will be sent the information form and a connection guide by email or by post and an appointment will be scheduled for a dematerialized inclusion visit with a study investigator. The inclusion visit will be carried out remotely, from a secure platform. Upon receipt of consent, the investigators will assign an identification number to the volunteer and will trigger the sending by post of a phenotyping BOX to their home containing all the material necessary to carry out the study, accompanied by an explanatory note. The volunteers will connect to a secure platform to complete 29 questionnaires, will carry out functional tests and anthropometric measurements and will collect their biological samples (blood drops and urine). Volunteers will send their biological samples to the INRAE laboratory within 2 days of their collection.
In return, volunteers will have the opportunity to:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Central trial contact
Laurent Mosoni, Ph D; Sergio Polakof, Ph D
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal