The Fasting Study - Unraveling the Mechanistic Effects of Prolonged Fasting in Humans.

NCT ID: NCT03757767

Last Updated: 2019-04-24

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

24 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-11-12

Study Completion Date

2019-01-22

Brief Summary

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Elevated levels of plasma triglycerides are increasingly recognized as an important causal risk factor for cardiovascular disease and associated pathologies. Lowering plasma triglycerides may therefore be a therapeutic target to lower cardiovascular disease risk. With this study the investigators want to examine the effects of fasting on adipose tissue metabolism in humans.

Detailed Description

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Rationale: Elevated levels of plasma triglycerides are increasingly recognized as an important causal risk factor for cardiovascular disease and associated pathologies. Lowering plasma triglycerides may therefore be a therapeutic target to lower cardiovascular disease risk. Lipoprotein lipase (LPL) is the enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolysis of plasma triglycerides into fatty acids on the capillary endothelium, thereby lowering plasma triglycerides and stimulating the uptake of these fatty acids into cells. Angiopoietin-like 4 (ANGPTL4) is produced by fat cells and promotes the unfolding and inactivation of LPL, leading to decreased hydrolysis of plasma triglycerides. The role of ANGPTL4 in regulating LPL is especially important during fasting. However, as most studies are performed in animal models, little is known about the effects of fasting on adipose tissue metabolism in humans, and specifically on ANGPTL4 and its relationship with LPL.

Objectives: The key objective of this study is to determine the effect of a prolonged fast on ANGPTL4 gene and protein expression in subcutaneous adipose tissue, the key organ involved in lipid metabolism. Additionally, the effect of a prolonged fast on LPL gene expression, LPL protein expression, and on LPL activity in subcutaneous adipose tissue will be examined. To explore the systemic effects of a prolonged fast, the investigators will also measure ANGPTL4 levels in plasma, and ANGPTL4 and LPL gene expression in circulating immune cells (PBMCs). The secondary objective of this study is to obtain a more holistic view on the changes occurring upon a prolonged fast, by examining the effects of fasting on whole genome expression, post-transcriptional changes, and on markers of metabolic status. The combined results of all measurements will ultimately lead to a better understanding of the mechanistic effects of a prolonged fast and the metabolic functioning in humans.

Study design: The Fasting Study is a single arm intervention study in healthy men and women. The investigators will examine the effects of a fed state, which is 2 hours after the last food intake, versus a prolonged fasted state, which is 26 hours after the last food intake. Adipose tissue biopsies and blood samples will be taken 2 hours after the last meal and 26 hours after the last meal. The 24 hours between sampling points are chosen to prevent effects of the circadian rhythm.

Study population: The study population will consist of 24, 40-70 years old men and women with a BMI of 22-30 kg/m2, selected from the surroundings of Wageningen through the mailing list for potential study research subjects of the division of Human Nutrition and health of Wageningen University. If needed, additional recruitment of research subjects will take place by flyers and posters, or advertisements in local newspapers.

Intervention: All research subjects will start with the consumption of a standardized meal (ad libitum). Directly thereafter the intervention begins, which is a fasting period of twenty-six-hours, during which research subjects are not allowed to eat or drink anything except for water, which the research subjects may consume ad libitum. The investigators will take the first blood samples and adipose tissue biopsies two hours after the consumption of the standardized meal. This is the fed state: the point in time where the body is physiologically fed, based on the average time for plasma free fatty acids to drop. Twenty-four hours after the "fed state", research subjects are in the prolonged fasted state, and the investigators will take the final blood samples and adipose tissue biopsies. The time period of twenty-four-hours between sampling points is chosen to prevent the effects of circadian related changes on our outcome measures.

Conditions

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Fasting Adipose Tissue Clinical Trial Lipid Metabolism

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Research subjects are measured in the fed state and in the prolonged fasted state.
Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Intervention arm

Fasting for 26-hours.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Fasting for 26-hours

Intervention Type OTHER

All research subjects will have to fast for 26 hours in total.

All research subjects start with a standardized meal. Two hours after the standardized meal the samples in the fed state will be taken. Research participants are not allowed to eat anything after the consumption of the standardized meal until the second measurements on day 2, 26-hours later. There are 24 hours between the two measurement points.

Interventions

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Fasting for 26-hours

All research subjects will have to fast for 26 hours in total.

All research subjects start with a standardized meal. Two hours after the standardized meal the samples in the fed state will be taken. Research participants are not allowed to eat anything after the consumption of the standardized meal until the second measurements on day 2, 26-hours later. There are 24 hours between the two measurement points.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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Prolonged fasting

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Apparently healthy man or woman
* Age 40-70y at the time of recruitment
* BMI of 22-30 kg/m2
* Willing to fast for 26 hours
* Willing to give blood samples
* Willing to give adipose tissue biopsies
* Willing to consume the standardized meal on test day 1
* Signed informed consent
* Having a general practitioner

Exclusion Criteria

* Alcohol on average: more than 2 consumptions/day or more than 14 consumptions/week
* Tobacco smoker
* Usage of drugs
* Following a diet within one month of starting the study (for example a ketogenic diet)
* Allergic to one or more components of the standardized meal
* Donated or intend to donate blood from 2 months before the study until the end of the study
* Unstable body weight (weight gain or loss \>5 kg in the past three months)
* Diagnosed with any long-term medical condition that can interfere with the study outcome (i.e. cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus type 1 or 2, liver, pulmonary, or renal disease)
* Use of prescribed medication
* Use of supplements or over the counter medication (OTC) known to interfere with glucose or lipid homeostasis in the week before the start of the study, and during the study
* Being pregnant or lactating
* Participation in another biomedical study (other than the EetMeetWeet study) during this study
* Members of the research team, or first degree family members of the research team
* Working, or doing an internship at the division "Human Nutrition and Health" - Wageningen University
Minimum Eligible Age

40 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

70 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Wageningen University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Lydia A. Afman

Principal Investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Lydia Afman, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Wageningen University

Locations

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Wageningen University, Division of Human Nutrition

Wageningen, Gelderland, Netherlands

Site Status

Countries

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Netherlands

References

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Ruppert PMM, Michielsen CCJR, Hazebroek EJ, Pirayesh A, Olivecrona G, Afman LA, Kersten S. Fasting induces ANGPTL4 and reduces LPL activity in human adipose tissue. Mol Metab. 2020 Oct;40:101033. doi: 10.1016/j.molmet.2020.101033. Epub 2020 Jun 3.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 32504883 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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NL-66589.081.18

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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