Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT07487090
Fasted vs. Fed State Exercise
Fasted vs. Fed State Exercise for Cardiovascular Health and Weight Loss
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- Phase 2
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 40 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Arkansas Colleges of Health Education · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 59 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
Although many medications exist for both heart disease and obesity, cost, lack of access for all people, side effects and the desire for a more natural solution have left many people seeking lifestyle treatments such as exercise. Scientists know that exercise is highly beneficial for heart health. When exercise also produces weight loss, these benefits are much improved. Although using exercise to treat or prevent heart disease / obesity is recommended, not all people respond well. Some see significant weight loss and health improvements while others see little changes. For these reasons, new strategies surrounding the use and design of an exercise program are needed. One such strategy could be performing aerobic exercise before breakfast (fasted exercise). When exercising fasted, food/energy stores are low, and one relies on stored body fat for energy. This may help heart health and weight loss. This has never been tested in a program long enough to see such changes. This study will, for the first time, assess the effects of a 16-week aerobic exercise program performed fasted compared to after eating. Outcomes will include blood fats, blood pressure, fat-burning abilities and weight loss. Starting an exercise program can also make people to eat more. This limits the success of exercise. The study will also evaluate ways fasted exercise could change eating, as it possible that fasted exercise could also cause people to eat more, which would limit weight loss and health improvements.
Detailed description
This study will be the first to evaluate a long-term (16-week) aerobic exercise intervention performed in the fasted state (compared to fed state) at a guidelines-based dose. Primary outcomes for Aim 1 will include changes in fat \& fat-free mass (DXA), energy compensation, blood pressure \& lipids, aerobic fitness, and substrate oxidation (respiratory quotient, RQ) at rest and during activity. It is also important to understand sources of response variability to an exercise program. Individuals tend to compensate for the energy they expend during exercise, primarily by increasing energy intake (EI). Such compensatory eating behaviors likely stem from a series of evolutionarily conserved responses, ensuring energy is available for vital organ function and reproduction when faced with an energy deficit. This proposal will be the first to evaluate how fasted exercise training influences (Aim 2 outcomes): physiological hunger (hormonal responses to a standardized meal) and behavioral constructs shown to influence EI and weight status (food reinforcement and attentional bias towards food cues). The overall hypothesis is that fasted state exercise will result in greater energy compensation, attenuating weight loss compared to an identical dose of exercise performed in the post-prandial state. This study will further hypothesize an attenuated weight loss with fasted exercise training will negate beneficial cardiovascular adaptations stemming from improvements in oxidative metabolism commonly associated with fasted exercise. Adults (aged 18-59 years, BMI: 25-45 kg/m2) will be randomized to a 16-week supervised aerobic exercise intervention (progressing to a guidelines-based dose of 1600 kcal/wk). Exercise sessions will be performed between 0500h and 1100h, 4 days per week in either the fasted state (FAST, 8-12 hour fast) or post-prandially (FED, within 3 hours of eating at least 300 kcal).
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | 16 week exercise intervention | Both groups will receive a 16-week supervised aerobic exercise program progressing to 1,600 kcal of EE per wk (4 sessions/week) at moderate intensity (40-50% heart rate reserve, HRR). |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2026-01-05
- Primary completion
- 2027-07-01
- Completion
- 2027-12-01
- First posted
- 2026-03-23
- Last updated
- 2026-03-23
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07487090. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.