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The purpose of this project is to establish a Center of Excellence in Research on Obesity that will focus on severe obesity. The prevalence of severe obesity (i.e., Class 2 and 3 obesity; body mass index > 35 kg/m2 and 40 kg/m2) is increasing more rapidly than is overweight and Class 1 obesity. Treatment guidelines for severe obesity are uncertain.
Three novel hypotheses regarding the pathogenesis of severe obesity will be tested: a) using non-invasive methods to measure energy expenditure; b) conducting an annotated lipomic search for bio-markers of impaired fat oxidation; and c) examining the role of obesity-induced inflammation as a cause for leptin resistance. Responses will also be measured following intervention with diet and activity.
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SPECIFIC AIMS The first specific aim is to examine mechanisms for the pathogenesis of severe obesity.
Obesity is a heterogeneous and complex metabolic disorder. The pathogenesis of obesity remains obscure and it is unclear why some individuals are prone to severe obesity. It is also unclear why there are ethnic and racial differences for severe obesity. Many scientists postulate that metabolic vulnerabilities for obesity can be identified in the severely obese. The 1st specific aim examines the pathogenesis of severe obesity with three research protocols applied within the same cohort of research participants.
The 2nd specific aim is to develop an effective intervention for the severely obese.
Axiomatic in the contemporary approaches to treatment of obesity is that clinically significant benefits are obtained with modest weight loss. This principle underlies the consensus recommendations for a weight loss target of 5 to 10% for overweight and obese individuals. The 2nd specific aim is to implement a behavioral dietary and physical activity intervention and assess whether this achieves a target weight loss at 1 year of ≥ 7% in Class II and Class III obese research participants. 120 adults, as described above, will have a 1 year intervention. Intervention to increase physical activity in the severely obese may be particularly challenging. Possibly this is easier after a period of weight loss. The staging of diet and physical activity (DE versus DEDELAY) will examine this.
The 3rd specific aim is to assess the effect of intervention on adverse health risks.
The medical rational for weight loss and physical activity is to improve health and ameliorate adverse effects of obesity. The 3rd specific aim is to assess the impact of intervention in the Phase 1 cohort. A panel of standardized clinical measurements, laboratory tests, and self-report instruments will be performed at baseline, 6 months and 1 year. We will examine: 1) traditional cardiovascular risk factors (e.g. hypertension, dyslipidemia, glucose and insulin, along with other endocrine measurements); 2) markers of inflammation, adipokines and cytokines; 3) body composition and regional distribution of adipose tissue; 4) functional status (a timed 400 meter corridor walk); 5) sub-clinical vascular disease (pulse wave velocity and carotid ultrasound); 7) health history and use of medications; and 8) demographic indices, social and neighborhood factors, quality of life, impact of obesity, and self-perception of body image and discrimination. One line of inquiry concerns the role of baseline characteristics in accounting for heterogeneity between individuals in adverse effects of severe obesity. The second line of inquiry is to assess the impact of intervention to change these parameters.
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310 participants in 3 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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