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Background:
Time restricted eating (TRE) is a form of fasting in which a person eats only during a set window of time, which is usually between 4 and 10 hours each day. Researchers want to know more about how TRE may affect health.
Objective:
To learn how TRE affects women with different body sizes.
Eligibility:
Healthy women aged 18 to 50 years.
Design:
Participants will have 2 visits: 1 screening visit and one 5-day stay in the clinic.
Participants will fast before both visits. They will have a physical exam with blood tests. They will talk to a nutritionist about the foods they eat. They will lay under a clear hood for up to 45 minutes during a test that measures how many calories they burn while resting.
Participants will keep a food diary for up to 7 days before their clinic stay. They will apply a continuous glucose monitor the day before they go to the clinic. This is a device that attaches to the skin of the stomach. They will wear this device throughout their clinic stay.
All meals will be provided during the clinic stay. Participants will follow TRE on 3 days. They will answer survey questions and have tests during their stay, including:
Full description
Study Description:
Intermittent fasting confers anti-inflammatory effects, although underlying metabolic mechanisms are poorly defined. This pilot study will explore ketone bodies as a mediator of inflammation in response to time restricted eating (TRE-6-hr feeding/18-hr fast) without caloric restriction compared to a more conventional dietary regimen (12-hr feeding/12-hr fast) in women classified as obese and lean.
Objectives:
Primary Aim 1: Quantify ketone body (beta-OHB) whole-body turnover after short-term early 6-hr TRE compared to a conventional 12-hr dietary regimen in women.
Primary Aim 2: Quantify CD4+ T cell responses after short-term early 6-hr TRE compared to a conventional 12-hr dietary regimen in women.
Secondary Aim 1: Determine metabolic response to short-term early 6-hr TRE in lean women vs women with obesity.
Secondary Aim 2: Determine immunomodulatory effects of short-term early 6-hr TRE in lean women vs women with obesity.
Exploratory Aim 1: Evaluate ketone body, hormonal, and cardiometabolic responses after short-term early 6-hr TRE compared to a conventional 12-hr dietary regimen in women classified as lean and with obesity.
Exploratory Aim 2: Evaluate effects of short-term early 6-hr TRE on perceived appetite, stress, and gastrointestinal symptoms.
Endpoints:
Primary:
Secondary:
Exploratory:
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
In order to be eligible to participate in this study, an individual must meet all of the following criteria:
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
An individual who meets any of the following criteria will be excluded from participation in this study:
This study will recruit only women. The study design was informed by our Protocol NCT04728165 which investigates an identical 6:18h TRE intervention in males who are healthy and those with psoriasis. Based on our pilot data in men, the current study is needed to test our hypothesis in women. This study in women is a critical next step to replicate the findings in women and to understand sex-specific differences in TRE response and ketone metabolism.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
150 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Lilian S Mabundo; Stephanie T Chung, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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