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Towards Personalized Nutrition With SCAPIS2-HOME

C

Chalmers University of Technology

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Cardiovascular Disease (CVD)
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

Treatments

Other: Dietary intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06992921
SCAPIS2-HOME

Details and patient eligibility

About

The Swedish CardioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS) is a nationwide, open-access, population-based cohort in Sweden designed to study cardiovascular disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. In January 2024, the reexamination of half of the cohort from SCAPIS1 started (the SCAPIS2). In SCAPIS2-HOME (a sub-study of SCAPIS2), individual responses to standardized isocaloric breakfasts and repeated Mixed Meal Tolerance Tests (MMTTs) will be investigated.

For this purpose, participants from the SCAPIS baseline cohort will be invited to take part in a 10-day intervention study, where participants will consume breakfast meals at clinic and the MMTTs at home. The breakfast meals will include ordinary cereal products that consist of either whole grain or refined grain foods served along with other typical breakfast items to be part of either a low-carbohydrate/high-fat or high-carbohydrate/low-fat breakfast. For the MMTTs, we will use standardized meal formulas called PhenFlex, which are high in calories, fat, and glucose and will be consumed repeatedly at home in the evening or the morning. Blood samples will be analyzed using clinical markers such as C-peptide, triglycerides, and markers of inflammation along with metabolomics. Continuous glucose monitoring will be used to obtain 24-hour interstitial glucose concentrations every 15 minutes during the 10-day intervention. Fecal- and blood samples will also be collected along with dietary assessments.

The research aims to understand the differential metabolic responses (glycemia, insulinemia, lipid profile, inflammation markers, and key metabolites) individuals may show after consuming whole grains or refined grains as part of breakfasts with high or low carbohydrate content. It is further to characterize to what extent an individual's specific characteristics, including the microbiota, health status, anthropometry, and habitual diet, drive such response differences. Since the study is a sub-set of the SCAPIS cohort, there are unique possibilities to relate the postprandial responses to hard risk factors such as prediabetic status (measured by oral glucose tolerance test), hepatic steatosis (liver fat deposition) and atherosclerotic plaque in the coronary arteries.

Full description

The Swedish CArdioPulomonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS) is a national population study in Sweden, where comprehensive examinations have been carried out on 30,000 randomly selected people between 50-64 years during the years 2013-2018. The study is a collaboration between the country's six hospitals in Gothenburg, Malmö/Lund, Stockholm, Uppsala, Linköping and Umeå. The overall aim of SCAPIS is to reduce the risk of cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases in future generations. The study has resulted in a project where common diseases such as cardiovascular disease and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) can be studied. SCAPIS research will better understand disease mechanisms and improve prevention and treatment methods.

SCAPIS 2 is a follow-up study conducted according to a detailed study protocol. Randomly selected participants from the SCAPIS baseline survey, 50% per site, will be invited to a re-survey until the desired number of 15,000 research subjects is reached. All research subjects will receive information about the study and informed consent will be obtained. The SCAPIS2-HOME study, will take place at two of the sites: Gothenburg and Umeå. In Gothenburg, 3133 participants will be examined over a two-year period, starting in January 2024. In Umeå, 1254 participants will be examined over the course of one year, starting in April 2024.

In SCAPIS2-HOME, all 4387 participants will go though a 10-day intervention where they will be provided with one standardized breakfast meal at the clinic and three mixed meal test drinks at home. The project will also include the collection of blood samples before and after meals to evaluate triglycerides, c-peptides, inflammation biomarkers (Glyc-A and hsCRP) along with metabolomics, continuous glucose monitoring, fecal samples and assessment of dietary intake.

During the first day of the intervention, the participants will be assigned to one of the four standardized meals. In Gothenburg, all standardised meals will be served in the morning, while in Umeå, half of the participants will consume the breakfast meals "as lunch". The meals will be based on foods regularly eaten for breakfast in Sweden, representing different carbohydrate and fat contents and containing either whole grain or refined grain products. One high fat/low carb (HF/LC) and one low fat/high carb (HF/LC) breakfast will be developed. The plan is to test different carbohydrate quality (whole grain vs. refined grain) for the HF/LC and the LF/HC breakfasts - resulting in four different breakfast meals.

In addition to the standardized breakfast meals, the participants will be instructed to perform three repeated Mixed Meal Tolerance Tests (MMTTs) at home. The PhenFlex drink will be used as MMTT in SCAPIS2-HOME which has been chosen to ensure our trial will be comparable with other large-scale trials planned in Europe currently. PhenFlex is a high-caloric mixed-meal challenge test containing 75 g of glucose, 60 g of fat, and 20 g of protein that induces a subtle systemic metabolic response.

The first MMTT should be done the day after the first clinical visit (Day 2), the second MMTT will take place three days after that (Day 5), and the third MMTT three days after that (Day 8). The participants will be randomized into two consumption patterns for the three MMTTs: morning, morning, evening (group 1), or evening, evening, morning (group 2). The randomization into the two groups for the MMTT tests are independent of which breakfast the participants has consumed.

Venous blood samples will be collected on the day at the clinic (Day 1). Capillary blood will be collected at the clinic and at home using collection kits from Capitainer® before and after the consumption of the standardized meal and the three meal tolerance tests. The samples will be collected at time 0, 60, 120 and 240 minutes.

A CGM (Abbott FreeStyle Libre Pro iQ [Chicago, Illinois, USA]) will be used to obtain Continuous glucose monitoring will be used to obtain 24-hour interstitial glucose concentrations every 15 minutes during the 10-day intervention.

Dietary intake will be assessed with a food frequency questionnaire previously used in SCAPIS (mini-MealQ) and with a repeated, web-based 24-hour recall (Riksmaten Flex from the Swedish Food Agency). The 24-hour recall will be filled in during the same four days as the test meals.

Lipemic and C-peptide responses (as a surrogate for insulin) will be measured in blood collected with Capitainers® before and after the meal challenge tests. Triglycerides will be measured with HPLC after lipid extraction. HDL, LDL, and other blood lipids will also be measured.

Enrollment

4,387 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Participants from the Swedish CArdioPulomonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS)

Exclusion criteria

  • Food allergies or intolerances preventing consumption of any products included in the study
  • Bariatric surgery, gastric bypass, or sleeve.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

4,387 participants in 1 patient group

Dietary intervention
Experimental group
Description:
10-day dietary intervention using standardized test meals
Treatment:
Other: Dietary intervention

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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