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Obesity today has become one of the main public health concerns. As a consequence, different strategies have arisen to fight weight gain. One of the alternative strategies to increase the success of therapeutic approaches to weight loss is the increase in energy expenditure, through thermogenesis, regulated by the beige/brown adipose tissue (BAT). Studies have shown that beige/BAT has a strong correlation with body weight regulation. It has also been demonstrated that cold exposure activates beige/BAT. Recent studies, mainly in animal models, suggest that beige/BAT can also be activated by specific food and nutrients. Concomitantly, new dietary interventions, to treat obesity, have also been studied. One of these dietary interventions is the Fasting Mimicking Diet (FMD). Since FMD is high in unsaturated fat, and clinical trials have shown that FMD interventions reduced body weight and improved metabolic health, there is a possible association between this diet and the activation of beige/BAT. The aim of this is study is to investigate the effect of Fasting Mimicking Diet on the activation of beige/brown adipose tissue, in humans with overweight. This will be an open clinical trial with the duration of three consecutive months (three cycles of the FMD diet). There will be an FMD and a control group. The following data will be collected before and after the intervention, for each group: dietary intake and physical activity data, evaluation of beige/brown adipose tissue activation (Positron Emission Tomography - PET with fluoride-18-labeled fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) in combination with computed tomography - PET/CT scan, Thermal Imaging, BAT adipokines and genes related to BAT activity), basal metabolic rates and caloric needs (Indirect Calorimetry), anthropometric measures and body composition (DEXA scan), lipid profile and inflammatory markers. Data will be expressed as mean and standard deviation and the variables will be compared by Student's t-test or ANOVA, for repeated measures.
Full description
HYPOTHESIS
Beige/BAT has been shown as a promising strategy to treat obesity. The exact mechanism, and stimulus, of activation of this tissue have not been completely clarified. However, some studies have identified some nutrients, such as unsaturated fat, as a potential stimulus for activation. The effect of Fasting Mimicking Diet on the activation of Beige/Brown Adipose Tissue has not yet been investigated. Since FMD is high in unsaturated fat, and clinical trials have shown that FMD interventions reduced body weight and improved metabolic health, there is a possible association between this diet and the activation of beige/BAT.
Our hypothesis is that an intervention, with a 5-days cycle for 3 consecutive months, of Fasting Mimicking Diet will promote beige/brown adipose tissue activation and will improve body weight and metabolic markers related to obesity, in humans with overweight.
OBJECTIVES
Main Objective
To evaluate the effect of a dietary intervention using 3 cycles of Fasting Mimicking Diet on the activation of beige/brown adipose tissue, in humans with overweight.
Specific Objectives
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Selection of Participants
The estimated sample size is 26 individuals. Participants will be overweight. There will be a control group (n=13) and an FMD group (n=13). There will be similar sample size for both genders. Participants will be recruited through electronic and printed media propagation.
Design
This will be an open clinical trial with the duration of three consecutive months (three cycles). There will be data collection before, during and after the dietary intervention. In this intervention, participants will be requested either to follow three cycles of a Fasting Mimicking Diet, or to follow their habitual eating habits for three months (control group). For the FMD group, participants will receive the FMD diet and will be requested to follow the recommendations from the manufacturer: FMD diet for 5 consecutive days (during these days, they will be asked to only eat the FMD diet), and for the remaining 25 days of the month, participants should continue with their habitual eating habits. This procedure will be repeated three times.
The FMD diet will be provided by L-Nutra, Nutrition for Longevity (commercial name of the diet: ProLon). All the data will be collected at University of Campinas, Brazil. More specifically, the Indirect Calorimetry and the DEXA scan will be done at the LIMED (Laboratory of Investigation of Metabolism and Diabetes) and the PET/CT (FDG-18) will be done at the Center of Nuclear Medicine in the Hospital de Clínicas (HC) Hospital.
The following data will be collected from both groups (control and FMD):
Evaluation of food consumption: 24hr-Food Recall - before, during and after the intervention;
Evaluation of physical activity: short version of the International Physical Activity Questionnaire IPAQ) - before and after the intervention;
Evaluation of beige/BAT activity:
Evaluation of basal metabolic rates and caloric needs: Indirect Calorimetry (gas exchange analysis: oxygen (O2) consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) release) - before and after the intervention;
Evaluation of anthropometric measures - before, during and after the intervention:
Blood samples - before, during and after the intervention:
Statistical Analysis
Data will be expressed as mean and standard deviation and the variables will be compared by Student's t-test or ANOVA, for repeated measures.
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26 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Marcela R Simoes, MS Candidate; Licio A Velloso, Professor
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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