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The Effect of Mankai on Glycemic Control Among Patients With T2D

B

Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Status and phase

Active, not recruiting
Phase 2

Conditions

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Treatments

Other: Water consumption
Dietary Supplement: Mankai supplementation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06416475
SOR-0259-23

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators aim to explore the effect of daily supplementation of Wolfia globosa Mankai on HbA1c and insulin resistance response among participants with type 2 diabetes (T2D). The investigators hypothesize that adding daily Mankai to T2D's healthy nutrition might lower HbA1c and promote glycemic control.

Methods: A 3-month pilot RCT among 104 patients with T2D, with two intervention arms consuming comparable bottle volumes of either crude plant Mankai beverage (60ml Mankai) or water (60ml) 3 times/day postprandially over 3 months. Blood, urine, fecal, and clinical measures will be taken at 0 and 3 months. Overall appetite, food intake, symptoms, and medical treatment will be monitored.

Importance: This study's results will shed light on the effects of regular Mankai consumption on HbA1c among patients with T2D, which may reveal a new nutritional source to improve glycemic control in T2D.

Full description

Type 2 diabetes (T2D), most commonly stemming from sustained obesity, adiposity, and a sedentary lifestyle, is strongly associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Glycated hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), reflecting glycemic control, is tightly related to cardiovascular risk. In the recent decade, several antihyperglycemic medications have been shown to modify cardiovascular risk among patients with established cardiovascular disease. Maintaining a healthy diet, preferably a Mediterranean-like diet, rich in plant-based protein and low in meat products, is the first-line intervention to promote glycemic control and reduce cardiovascular risk among T2D. However, whether specific nutritional products may independently promote glycemic control beyond medical treatment is unclear.

Mankai, a newly cultivated duckweed Wolffia-globosa strain, has been extensively studied in recent years. Mankai is rich in whole bioavailable protein, iron, and vitamin B12 and is rich in 200 different potent polyphenols, potentially affecting the metabolomic-gut-clinical axis. Mankai consumption, as a dominant part of the green-Mediterranean diet, was shown to promote weight loss, systemic inflammation lowering, and cardiometabolic risk reduction and was associated with regressions in hepatosteatosis, visceral abdominal adiposity, and proximal aortic stiffness among patients with abdominal obesity with or without T2D. Also, Mankai consumption was mainly linked with improved glycemic control, dramatic elevation in fasting Ghrelin levels, and insulin sensitivity recovery. Regular Mankai consumption promoted microbiome optimization, mainly impacting bacterial glucose metabolism and human glucose control.

In this proposed study, The investigators aim to explore the effect of daily consumption of 60mL crude plant Mankai beverage boost after 3 meals among patients with T2D on HbA1c levels (gold-standard for assessing glycemic control, primary outcome).

"Mankai" is a cultivated strain of Wolffia globosa, an aquatic plant, part of the family of plants known commonly as duckweeds. Duckweeds are elementary flowering aquatic plants floating on or beneath still or slow-moving water bodies.

There is a long history of using Wolffia species, particularly Wolffia globosa, as food, especially in Southeast Asia: Burma, Laos, and northern Thailand, where it has been used as a vegetable for many generations. The plant is cultivated locally in rain-fed open ponds, grown commercially in Thailand, and sold in local markets throughout Thailand and Laos. There are numerous ways of Wolffia globosa consumption and a variety of recipes, using it either as the main ingredient (such as Wolffia crisps or "Kaeng pum" - a popular vegetable dish in northeastern Thailand) or incorporating it in other foods (e.g., Wolffia-meat ball, fermented Wolffia-meat sausage, Wolffia rice noodle, Wolffia cookies, Wolffia bread, and various soups and salads). Moreover, Wolffia is known as one of the essential food sources in northern Thailand.

Along with its long history as a food source in Southeast Asia, it is recognized as an edible vegetable for humans in several databases, including the USDA (2014) GRIN database and a database dedicated to tropical species. For the proposed clinical trial, Mankai will be provided as a beverage, refrigerated at ±4°C. Participants will consume Mankai as an additional additive to a standardized healthy Mediterranean diet.

Enrollment

104 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age > 30 years
  • A formal diagnosis of T2D (126mg/dl fasting glucose or higher, or HbA1c>6.5%) or taking T2D medications with HbA1c levels over 7%
  • Medication stability for at least 3 months prior to Intervention initiation
  • Adherence to medical follow-up in primary care clinic or diabetes-centered outpatient services

Exclusion criteria

  • HbA1c lower than 7% or higher than 10%
  • Known insulinopenia
  • Treatment with coumadin (warfarin)
  • Advanced renal failure
  • Significantly disturbed liver enzymes (liver transaminases or bilirubin levels more than time three upper-normal-limit)
  • A significant illness that might require hospitalization
  • Regular Mankai consumption
  • State of pregnancy or lactation
  • Presence of active cancer or chemotherapy treatment in last three years
  • Participation in another trial

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

104 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Mankai supplementation group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Three times a day supplementation of postprandial Mankai duckweed drink (60mL crude plant Mankai beverage) right after breakfast, lunch, and dinner while maintaining the recommended Mediterranean diet lifestyle and medical treatment.
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Mankai supplementation
Water group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Three times a day consumption of postprandial water (60mL) right after breakfast, lunch, and dinner while maintaining the recommended Mediterranean diet lifestyle and medical treatment.
Treatment:
Other: Water consumption

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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