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The Role of Brown Adipose Tissue in Triglyceride Clearance in People (BAT-TG)

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The Washington University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity

Treatments

Other: Exposure to thermoneutral conditions
Other: Cold exposure

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02786251
201602059

Details and patient eligibility

About

The recent discovery of functional brown adipose tissue (BAT) in humans has led to a paradigm shift in adipose tissue biology; it is now believed that adipocytes may play a significant role in regulating substrate metabolism. Given that the resurgence in the interest in human BAT is still in its infancy, a number of fundamental questions pertaining to the role of BAT in human physiology remain unanswered. One area of particular importance, but poorly understood, is the potential effect of BAT on triglyceride (TG) metabolism. Data from a series of studies have found that BAT is inversely associated with adiposity, high blood lipids, and fatty liver in people. However, the role of BAT in the regulation of TG metabolism in people is not known. The overall goal of this study is to determine the physiological importance of the human BAT in TG metabolism. To this end, we are planning to study overweight/obese women with high amounts of BAT (BAT+, n=14) and with no/minimal BAT (BAT-, n=14) both under thermoneutrality and mild cold exposure (~2 weeks apart). The investigators hypothesize that BAT+ participants will demonstrate greater plasma very low-density lipoprotein triglycerides (VLDL-TG) clearance rate compared to BAT- participants, and higher expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism only in BAT (but not muscle and white adipose tissue). Infusion of stable isotope tracers and metabolic modeling techniques will be used to assess VLDL-TG kinetics. Positron emission tomography computed tomography will be used for the identification and quantification of BAT. Supraclavicular BAT, abdominal white adipose tissue, and skeletal muscle tissue biopsies during cold exposure and thermoneutral conditions in conjunction with molecular biology techniques will used to measure expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism.

Enrollment

29 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

21 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Age ≥21 and ≤65 years
  • BMI 25.0-35.0 kg/m²

Exclusion criteria

  • Men
  • Previous bariatric surgery or gastrointestinal surgery
  • Structured exercise >2 days/week for ≥35 min of intense exercise (e.g., jogging, activity that causes heavy breathing and sweating) or ≥150 min per week of moderate intensity exercise (e.g., brisk walking)
  • Unstable weight (>5% change during the last 2 months before entering the study)
  • Significant organ system dysfunction (e.g., diabetes requiring medications, severe pulmonary, disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, kidney or cardiovascular disease)
  • Current cancer or cancer that has been in remission for <5 years
  • Conditions that render subject unable to complete all testing procedures (e.g., severe ambulatory impairments, limb amputations, or metal implants that interfere with imaging procedures; coagulation disorders)
  • Use of medications that are judged by the investigators to affect the study outcome measures or increase the risk of study procedures (e.g., anticoagulants) and that cannot be temporarily discontinued for this study
  • Smoke cigarettes or use of illegal drugs
  • Consumption of >14 units of alcohol (e.g., glass of wine or bottle of beer) per week
  • Pregnant or lactating
  • Persons who are not able to grant voluntary informed consent
  • Persons who are unable or unwilling to follow the study protocol or who, for any reason, the research team considers not an appropriate candidate for this study, including non-compliance with screening appointments or study visits

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

29 participants in 2 patient groups

BAT+
Other group
Description:
Individuals with significant amounts of BAT (\>20 ml)
Treatment:
Other: Exposure to thermoneutral conditions
Other: Cold exposure
BAT-
Other group
Description:
Individuals with no/minimal amounts of BAT (\<20 ml)
Treatment:
Other: Exposure to thermoneutral conditions
Other: Cold exposure

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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