Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03848546

Stimulating Fiber Intake Via Personalized Dietary Advice

Vezel-UP:Stimulating Fiber Intake Via Personalized Dietary Advice

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
106 (actual)
Sponsor
Wageningen University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Dietary fibers are linked to improved health and prevention of diseases such as obesity, stroke, hypertension, diabetes and colorectal cancer. Moreover, fibers play a crucial role in improving and maintaining gut health, by increasing stool weight,stool frequency and improvement of stool consistency. Currently, very few adults meet the recommendation of 30 (females) or 40 (males) grams per day. Personalized dietary advice may be the solution to increase dietary fiber intake in large populations. The objective is to investigate if a personalized dietary advice is more effective in increasing dietary fiber intake in the Dutch population than the general advice that is currently provided by the Netherlands Nutrition center and the Dutch Digestive Foundation (MLDS).Second objective is to assess the effect of increased fiber intake on stool pattern, perceived well-being and consumer behavior parameters and the role of psychological factors in the effectiveness of personalized dietary advice on dietary fiber intake. Study design: A 4.5-month (6 weeks intervention + follow-up after 3 months) single-blind randomized controlled trial with two groups: the intervention group, which receives personalized dietary advice (PDA), and the control group, which only receives the general dietary advice. Primary study parameters/outcome of the study: Primary endpoint is dietary fiber intake, which will be assessed using an Food Frequency Questionnaire and 24hr recalls. Fecal microbiota composition and metabolite levels will be used as an objective marker for fiber intake. Secondary study parameters/outcome of the study (if applicable): Secondary parameters include stool pattern, well-being, hunger, satiety and body weight. Furthermore, psychological measurements will give insight into why the PDA was (not) effective.

Detailed description

This study is performed in healthy adults, older than 18 years, with no gastro-intestinal complaints. The intervention group receives personalized dietary advice (PDA) based on their current food pattern, preferences and selfregulation capacity. The PDA aims to compute high-fiber alternatives for products that subjects currently use and that are close to their current eating behavior, to help increase dietary fiber intake. This PDA will be provided using an online webportal. The control group only receives a general dietary advice, e.g. (a) flyer(s) containing information on fibers from the Netherlands Nutrition Center and the MLDS. The intervention group will also receive this general advice next to the PDA.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPDASubjects receive personal dietary fiber advice to increase their fiber intake. This advice will be provided using an online web-portal, where subjects can choose high-fiber alternatives that closely match their own intake. The aim is to "swap" product for low in fiber for a high fiber alternative (such as white bread, whole wheat bread).
OTHERControl (no intervention)No intervention

Timeline

Start date
2019-03-01
Primary completion
2019-09-14
Completion
2019-09-14
First posted
2019-02-20
Last updated
2021-01-22

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03848546. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.