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The aim of this project is to generate pilot data for a grant proposal to evaluate the impact of intermittent cold exposure (ICE) on brown and white adipose tissue (BAT/WAT) function in children with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The condition NAFLD is the most common liver disease in both adults and children. There are many emerging drug therapies for NAFLD but at considerable cost in terms of potential side effects. In a mouse model of diet-induced obesity, ICE was shown to help activate BAT, which may help NAFLD and other obesity associated health risks. Given that children have more BAT than adults, we hypothesise that intermittent cold exposure via a cooling vest in children with NAFLD will increase BAT stores or function. We will investigate whether intermittent cold exposure via a cooling vest device will stimulate BAT and also establish whether the cooling vest is acceptable to children and young people. If it is acceptable and has an impact on BAT function this could be a new treatment to reduce the severity of metabolic disorders associated with obesity, particularly fatty liver, e.g. hepatic steatosis. In stage 1, we will investigate the impact of intermittent cold exposure (ICE) on brown and white adipose tissue (BAT/WAT) function in young people aged 16 to 26 years old, as a feasibility study to optimise the cooling process. In stage 2, we will investigate the impact of ICE on BAT and WAT function in 8-16 year olds with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and matched controls. Participants will have thermal imaging, MRI scans and provide samples before and after wearing the cooling vest.
Full description
ICE BAT is a single centre pilot study.
In stage 1, 12 to 24 young people aged 16-26 will be recruited into the study. Participants will use a cooling garment (for 1-2 hours). MRI scans and thermal imaging will be performed before and after ICE to evaluate BAT size and activation. Liver steatosis will be evaluated using MRI Proton Dense Fat Fraction (PDFF). Serum markers of BAT activation and glucose/lipid metabolism will be measured before and after ICE.
In stage 2,12 children with NAFLD and 12 age- and sex-matched controls will be enrolled in the study. In stage 2a, healthy controls will use a cooling garment (for 1-2 hours) and undergo MRI scan and thermal imaging before and after ICE to evaluate BAT size and activation. Liver steatosis will be evaluated using MRI PDFF. In stage 2b the NAFLD patients will be asked to attend for one day and if they are happy to continue, will use a cooling garment (for 1-2 hours/day for a further 4 days). MRI scans and thermal imaging will be performed before and after ICE on day 1 and day 5 to evaluate BAT size and activation. Liver steatosis will be evaluated using MRI PDFF. Serum markers of BAT activation and glucose/lipid metabolism will be measured on day 1 and day 5. Participants with NAFLD, will be asked to give a faecal sample for analysis of their gut microbiome before the study and after day 5 of ICE treatment.
Enrollment
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Inclusion criteria
Stage 1: Young Adult 16-26 year olds
Stage 2: Children 8-16 year olds
Exclusion criteria
Stage 1: Young Adult 16-26 year olds
Stage 2: Children 8-16 year olds
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
Masking
36 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Caroline Ovadia, Doctor; Dharshene Shivapatham, Masters
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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