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CompletedNCT02068885

Framingham State Food Study

Dietary Composition and Energy Expenditure During Weight-Loss Maintenance

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
234 (actual)
Sponsor
Boston Children's Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study will evaluate the effects of dietary composition on energy expenditure and chronic disease risk factors, while also exploring physiological mechanisms underlying these effects.

Detailed description

Many overweight and obese people can lose weight for a few months, but most have difficulty maintaining weight loss over the long term. One explanation for the poor long-term outcome of weight-loss diets relates to behavior, in that motivation to adhere to restrictive regimens typically diminishes with time. An alternative explanation is that weight loss elicits biological adaptations - specifically a decline in energy expenditure and an increase in hunger - that promote weight regain. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effects of dietary composition on energy expenditure and risk for chronic diseases, while also exploring physiological mechanisms underlying these effects. The study will be performed in collaboration with Framingham State University, providing a novel and feasible method for feeding subjects in dining halls and monitoring compliance. Following 12±2% weight loss on a standard run-in diet, 150 adults (aged 18 to 65 years) will be randomly assigned to one of three weight-loss maintenance diets controlled for protein content (20% of energy) and varying widely in dietary carbohydrate-to-fat ratio: Low-carbohydrate (20% of energy from carbohydrate, 60% fat), Moderate- carbohydrate (40% carbohydrate, 40% fat), High-carbohydrate (60% carbohydrate, 20% fat). During the weight-loss maintenance phase, energy intake will be adjusted to prevent changes in body weight. The primary outcome will be change in total energy expenditure (indirect calorimetry using stable isotopes) through 20 weeks. Secondary outcomes during weight maintenance will include resting energy expenditure (indirect calorimetry using respiratory gas exchange), physical activity (accelerometry), measures of insulin resistance and skeletal muscle work efficiency, components of the metabolic syndrome, and hormonal and metabolic measures that might inform an understanding of physiological mechanisms. We also will assess weight change during a 2-week ad libitum feeding phase, as an objective measure of dietary effects on hunger. The analytic framework for addressing study hypothesis will be repeated-measures analysis of variance, with adjustment for covariates (sex, race, ethnicity, age, anthropometrics, insulin sensitivity and secretion, obesity-related genes). We also will test each covariate for effect modification (covariate × diet interaction).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALFeeding studyFood provision throughout the study to all 3 dietary arms, with the following phases: 1) Weight loss; 2) Weight maintenance; 3) Ad libitum

Timeline

Start date
2014-08-17
Primary completion
2017-05-01
Completion
2017-05-01
First posted
2014-02-21
Last updated
2026-01-09
Results posted
2020-11-04

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02068885. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Framingham State Food Study (NCT02068885) · Clinical Trials Directory