Effects of Pulses Through the Gut Microbiome and Bioavailability of Bioactive Compounds
NCT ID: NCT05999136
Last Updated: 2024-01-12
Study Results
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Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
84 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-01-10
2024-10-16
Brief Summary
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1. How does the substitution of red meat with pulses affect some markers of cardiovascular risk?
2. How does this dietary intervention influence the composition and function of the gut microbiome, nutritional status, well-being indices, and biomarkers related to metabolic, oxidative, inflammatory, immune, and intestinal permeability status?
Participants will:
* be assigned to either the Pulses Diet (PulD) group or the Plant Proteins Diet (PPD) group or the Habitual diet (HabD) group;
* follow their habitual diet (HabD) or the prescribed dietary plan designed on individual habitual diet to be isocaloric and isoprotein but replacing red meat with pulses (PulD group) or a combination of pulses and plant-based meat substitutes (PPD group);
* keep their physical activity levels unchanged during the entire intervention period;
* be required to complete 7-day food diaries and associated questionnaires on appetite, along with additional questionnaires related to physical activity levels, overall well-being, mood, sleep quality, stool frequency and consistency at each nutritional intervention time-point.
Researchers will compare PulD, PPD, and HabD to assess if the dietary interventions have an impact on cardiometabolic health and gut microbiome.
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Detailed Description
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Despite the recognized health benefits of consuming legumes regularly, there is still a limited understanding of the underlying physiological mechanisms that drive these positive effects. An observational study conducted in Italy shed some light on this issue by demonstrating that individuals who closely adhere to the Mediterranean diet, which emphasizes reducing red meat consumption and increasing the intake of fruits, vegetables, and legumes, have gut microbiota characterized by a higher abundance of fiber-degrading bacteria. These individuals also exhibit higher levels of short-chain fatty acids in their feces and lower concentrations of TMAO in their urine. Furthermore, a randomized controlled trial conducted on individuals at risk of cardiovascular diseases due to an unhealthy lifestyle revealed that shifting from a typical Western diet to a more Mediterranean-like pattern led to an increase in the presence of fiber-degrading bacterial species in the gut microbiota. This dietary change also resulted in elevated circulating microbial metabolites associated with improved inflammatory status. While there is still a lack of comprehensive in vivo studies assessing the bioavailability of nutrients from legumes, a few clinical trials have investigated the influence of legumes on the intestinal microbiome. Nevertheless, the available literature indicates that legumes have the ability to influence the human microbiota. However, it is important to note that the specific effects of legumes on the microbiota can vary significantly across different studies, making it difficult to generalize these findings to all types of legumes.
In this framework, the present project will focus on the evaluation of the effect of replacing red meat with pulses (PulD) or a combination of pulses and plant-based meat substitutes (PPD) on the cardiometabolic health of individuals with unhealthy habits and sedentary lifestyles via the modification of intestinal microbial communities. Additionally, it seeks to investigate the effects on health outcomes, with a primary focus on evaluating changes in inflammatory, oxidative, immune, and hormonal status. The study will include the establishment of a 2-month dietary intervention with an isocaloric and isoprotein pulses diet (PulD) and a plant proteins diet (PPD). Coupled with detailed host phenotyping and gut microbiota profiling during and after the intervention, this will allow assessment of the causal effects of a diet rich in plant-based proteins (mainly from pulses) and the gut microbiome in populations at high risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD).
The potential eligibility of subjects to participate in this study will be assessed through pre-recruitment questionnaires. These questionnaires will collect personal and socio-demographic data of volunteers, general health information (including anthropometry, health status, medical history, smoking and alcohol consumption habits), details about individual dietary habits using the Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ), information about eating behavior through the Three Factor Eating Questionnaire (TFEQ), and levels of physical activity using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ). Subjects in the PulD group and PPD group will be assigned a personalized diet prepared on the basis of own eating habits as established by 7-day food diary recalls. Energy values and whole macronutrient composition of habitual diets will be kept unchanged during PulD and PPD intervention. However, changes in carbohydrate (dietary fibre vs. starch), dietary fat (saturated vs. mono/polyunsaturated fatty acids), and protein (vegetable vs. animal) composition will be applied as a consequence of replacing meat with pulses (PulD group) or with a mix of pulses and plant-based meat substitutes (PPD group). Control subjects will not change their habitual diet (HabD) during intervention. All subjects will be requested not to change physical activity levels during the 8 weeks intervention period. Compliance will be assessed every 2 weeks with a phone interview in order to evaluate the dietary intake and physical activity during the previous week. At each intervention time-point (baseline, 4 weeks, 8 weeks), for the nutritional check, subjects will complete 7-day food diaries and associated questionnaires on appetite (Visual Analog Scale, VAS) related to the previous week before the nutritional analysis. Additionally, measurements of blood pressure, weight, circumferences (waist and hips), and body composition through bioimpedance testing will be conducted. During the intervention period, subjects will be asked to fill out the International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ), questionnaires on quality of life (QoL), on depression, anxiety and stress (DASS), the King's Stool Chart (KSC) to evaluate frequency, weight, and consistency of feces, along with the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) to evaluate the quality of sleep.
Further analysis of compliance will be conducted based on metabolomics, allowing discrimination of animal/vegetable protein intake. Metabolomes (well known to reflect both diet and microbial metabolism) will also be compared between categories in order to identify protective or risk profiles using both bioinformatics and chemometrics approaches. Metagenomes will be analyzed following Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) utilized in landmark studies already published. Comparison of predefined groups of individuals will allow identification of microbial genes that have different abundance in the groups. Furthermore, genes will be associated with continuous variables of clinical and nutritional interest (e.g., intake of specific dietary components, insulin sensitivity) by covariance analysis. Concatenated datasets of physiological output data, metagenomic and metabolome profiles from the intervention studies will be used to predict subsets of features by multivariate analysis (PLS-DA) that can classify subjects according to their relative adherence to a PulD or PPD. The profile will be used to probe the microbiome for specific alterations as a function of the interventions.
The sample size needed to detect an effect of PulD and/or PPD on individual TMAO levels is defined based on previous study from Crimarco and colleagues. It was calculated that a sample of 28 participants per group would allow detecting a minimum difference of approximately -1.3 μM (-38%) in TMAO and approximately -0.9 mM (-18%) in cholesterol between each of the 2 test treatments vs. control and between the two test treatments, with a power of 80% and an α-error 0.017 to account for multiple comparisons (T-test).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Pulses Diet (PulD)
Subjects will follow a Pulses-enriched diet for 2 months.
Pulses diet
Subjects in the PulD group will be assigned a personalized diet prepared based on their own eating habits as established by 7-day food diary recalls. Energy values of habitual diets will be kept unchanged during the PulD intervention. The diet will be characterized by isocaloric and isoprotein substitutions, replacing habitual servings of red meat or processed meat with servings of pulses.
Plant Proteins Diet (PPD)
Subjects will follow a Plant protein-enriched diet for 2 months.
Plant proteins diet
Subjects in the PPD group will be assigned a personalized diet prepared based on their own eating habits as established by 7-day food diary recalls. Energy values of habitual diets will be kept unchanged during the PPD intervention. The diet will be characterized by isocaloric and isoprotein substitutions, replacing habitual servings of red meat or processed meat with a mixture of pulses and plant-based meat substitutes.
Habitual Diet (HabD)
Subjects will follow a habitual diet for two months.
Habitual diet
Control subjects will not change their habitual diet during intervention. All subjects will be requested not to change physical activity levels during the 8 week intervention period.
Interventions
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Pulses diet
Subjects in the PulD group will be assigned a personalized diet prepared based on their own eating habits as established by 7-day food diary recalls. Energy values of habitual diets will be kept unchanged during the PulD intervention. The diet will be characterized by isocaloric and isoprotein substitutions, replacing habitual servings of red meat or processed meat with servings of pulses.
Plant proteins diet
Subjects in the PPD group will be assigned a personalized diet prepared based on their own eating habits as established by 7-day food diary recalls. Energy values of habitual diets will be kept unchanged during the PPD intervention. The diet will be characterized by isocaloric and isoprotein substitutions, replacing habitual servings of red meat or processed meat with a mixture of pulses and plant-based meat substitutes.
Habitual diet
Control subjects will not change their habitual diet during intervention. All subjects will be requested not to change physical activity levels during the 8 week intervention period.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* 20 ≤ BMI ≤ 35 kg/m2;
* habitual diet characterized by ≥ 3 medium servings of fresh red meat or processed meat (equivalent to a portion weight of 100g of fresh meat and 50g of cured meats);
* habitual diet without probiotics, functional foods, and/or any type of food supplements;
* low level of physical activity (sedentary lifestyle);
* signing the informed consent form and expressing consent for the processing of personal data.
Exclusion Criteria
* Gastrointestinal disorders of any kind;
* Significant medical conditions;
* Pregnancy or breastfeeding;
* Hypertriglyceridemia (Triglycerides \> 200 mg/dL);
* Hypercholesterolemia (Cholesterol \> 200 mg/dL);
* Diabetes (Blood glucose ≥ 126 mg/dL);
* Hypertension (Blood pressure \> 140/90 mm Hg);
* Weight loss ≥ 3 kg in the past 2 months prior to the study;
* Use of any medication at enrollment and in the 2 months prior to the study;
* Regular diet rich in fruits and vegetables;
* Consumption of alcohol equivalent to or exceeding 3 glasses of wine per day;
* Concurrent participation in other clinical trials.
18 Years
65 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Paola Vitaglione
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Paola Vitaglione
Full Professor
Principal Investigators
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Paola Vitaglione, Professor
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Department of Agricultural Sciences, Federico II University
Locations
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Department of Agricultural Sciences, Federico II University
Portici, , Italy
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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References
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Crimarco A, Springfield S, Petlura C, Streaty T, Cunanan K, Lee J, Fielding-Singh P, Carter MM, Topf MA, Wastyk HC, Sonnenburg ED, Sonnenburg JL, Gardner CD. A randomized crossover trial on the effect of plant-based compared with animal-based meat on trimethylamine-N-oxide and cardiovascular disease risk factors in generally healthy adults: Study With Appetizing Plantfood-Meat Eating Alternative Trial (SWAP-MEAT). Am J Clin Nutr. 2020 Nov 11;112(5):1188-1199. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/nqaa203.
Meslier V, Laiola M, Roager HM, De Filippis F, Roume H, Quinquis B, Giacco R, Mennella I, Ferracane R, Pons N, Pasolli E, Rivellese A, Dragsted LO, Vitaglione P, Ehrlich SD, Ercolini D. Mediterranean diet intervention in overweight and obese subjects lowers plasma cholesterol and causes changes in the gut microbiome and metabolome independently of energy intake. Gut. 2020 Jul;69(7):1258-1268. doi: 10.1136/gutjnl-2019-320438. Epub 2020 Feb 19.
Other Identifiers
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DE LEGUMINIBUS
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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