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The Physiological Chronobiome Modified by Age, Sex and Under Evoked Conditions

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University of Pennsylvania

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Healthy
Healthy Aging

Treatments

Other: Fatty meal to challenge the physiological chronobiome in healthy young and old

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators piloted the characterization of the human chronobiome. Now, this line of research is extended to explore physiological chronobiome modulated by sex, age and under evoked conditions.

Full description

"Is your body clock important? Absolutely. Just ask any morning lark who lives with a night owl, or vice versa". This quote from a piece published in the Philadelphia Inquirer about the investigator's work illustrates the importance of time in one's personal preferences [https://www.inquirer.com/health/chronobiome-body-clock-university-pennsylvania-20190307.html].

Several decades of research have found out that how well a person functions, very much depends on how much this person is in harmony with her/his own preferences and environment. This harmony is acutely disturbed when one travels quickly across several time zones, because suddenly the body's physiology is still following the departure time but the arrival time tells the body something different. As a result, travelers often experience sleep problems and indigestion, which usually disappear after a couple of days. This is different in long-term shift workers for whom work outside of the typical daylight hours means that they have a higher risk for diseases including cardiovascular diseases, diabetes and cancer.

Another observation has been that many diseases occur or worsen at a specific time of day. Heart attacks, for example, most often occur when patients wake up in the morning. Shortness of breath peaks at 4 am in the morning for patients with asthma.

Intriguingly, more and more studies suggest that time of day matters how effective drugs work and how many side effects one might experience. To study this the investigators started to describe the human chronobiome, which foremost looks at time of day differences of a person's physiology, for example, in the small pilot study the investigators saw a difference in break down products, or metabolites, between mornings and evenings. Now, in this present study, the investigators wish to extend the understanding how the human chronobiome differs between healthy men and women, healthy young and old and how it reacts to a fatty meal challenge.

This knowledge will help the investigators to say when a finding can still be considered normal or maybe indicates a first sign of disease. The novelty of this approach is that the investigators measure long enough to understand the role of time of day for a person's chronobiome, that the investigators measure many things to obtain a comprehensive representation of a person's chronobiome, that every measure is timestamped, and that the investigators ask participants to eat fatty meals to see how the chronobiome changes.

Enrollment

48 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Young: 18-30 years of age, Old: 55-75 years of age
  2. Apparent healthy
  3. BMI (body mass index) up to 27.4
  4. Upper arm with intact skin, i.e. without areas of breached or injured skin visible, for ambulatory blood pressure (ABP) measurements,
  5. Own and use a smartphone.

Exclusion criteria

  1. History of severe psychiatric illness or cognitive conditions, for example (mania, schizophrenia, or mental retardation;
  2. Shift work, defined as recurring work between 22:00-05:00;
  3. A diagnosis of clinically significant obstructive sleep apnea;
  4. Serum creatinine > 1.5 mg/dl in men or >1.3 mg/del in women;
  5. Significant liver disease (>3x upper limit of normal);
  6. Diabetes mellitus;
  7. Past diagnosis of gastroesophageal reflux disease,
  8. Transmeridian travel across ≥3 time zones in the two weeks before the 48hr deep phenotype sessions;
  9. Use of oral or intravenous antibiotics in the 6 months prior to enrollment;
  10. Subjects, who have received an experimental drug, used an experimental medical device within 30 days prior to screening, or who gave a blood donation of ≥ one pint within 8 weeks prior to screening;
  11. > 2 drinks of alcohol per day;
  12. Use of drugs assessed in the urinary drug test;
  13. Nursing or pregnant (pregnancy will be repeatedly assessed at the beginning of each of the four inpatient visits, i.e. prior to the start of blood draws);
  14. Use of pacemaker or implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD);
  15. Bilateral mastectomy;
  16. History of Raynaud's phenomenon;
  17. Known allergy against natural latex rubber (contained in ABP bladder and tubing);
  18. Subjects taking medication with alpha-blockers.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

48 participants in 1 patient group

Fatty meal
Other group
Description:
To study how a fatty meal modifies the physiological chronobiome in young and old, an isocaloric controlled liquid high fat meal (ICLHFM) will be consumed within 5 min. The ICLHFM contains an equivalent to 35% of the estimated total daily energy requirements (TDE), 60% of kcal delivered from fat while 13% come from protein and 27 % from carbohydrate.
Treatment:
Other: Fatty meal to challenge the physiological chronobiome in healthy young and old

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

LaVenia Banas, CRN; Carsten C Skarke, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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