Bergia Robert E, Biskup Izabela, Giacco Rosalba, Costabile Giuseppina, Gray Savanna, Wright Amy, Vitale Marilena, Campbell Wayne W, Landberg Rikard, Riccardi Gabriele
Department of Nutrition Science, Purdue University, 700 West State St, West Lafayette, IN, 47907, USA.
Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, Food Science and Nutrition, Chalmers University of Technology, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Contemp Clin Trials Commun. 2020 Aug 13;19:100640. doi: 10.1016/j.conctc.2020.100640. eCollection 2020 Sep.
Adults with central adiposity and other features of the metabolic syndrome have a markedly elevated risk of developing type 2 diabetes (T2D) and cardiovascular disease (CVD). A Mediterranean-style healthy eating pattern (MED-HEP) and consumption of foods with a lower glycemic index (GI) are potential dietary approaches to curb the T2D and CVD epidemic. However, experimental evidence of the effectiveness of MED-HEP and of the contribution of GI towards improving indices of glucose homeostasis, especially among non-diabetic people, are lacking. Therefore, we developed the MedGI-Carb trial, a multi-center (Italy, Sweden, and United States) intervention in adults with at least two components of the metabolic syndrome (elevated waist circumference + one other component) that aims to improve markers of glucose homeostasis through dietary modification. All participants were randomized to consume an isocaloric high- or low-GI MED-HEP for 12 weeks. We hypothesized that indexes of insulinemia (primary outcome: postprandial insulin and glucose after standardized breakfast and lunch; secondary outcomes: fasting plasma glucose and insulin, HbA, 24-h continuous glucose monitoring) would be improved more with the low-GI versus the high-GI MED-HEP. Additionally, we hypothesized that consumption of a MED-HEP would improve other markers of cardiometabolic health and well-being (fasting blood pressure, fasting lipid profile, sleep quality, satiety, global metabolic alterations in the plasma metabolome, changes in the gut microbiota, subjective health and well-being), with no difference between groups. Collectively, the design of MEDGI-Carb allows several different research questions to be explored. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT03410719.
患有中心性肥胖及其他代谢综合征特征的成年人患2型糖尿病(T2D)和心血管疾病(CVD)的风险显著升高。地中海式健康饮食模式(MED-HEP)和食用低血糖指数(GI)的食物是遏制T2D和CVD流行的潜在饮食方法。然而,缺乏关于MED-HEP有效性以及GI对改善葡萄糖稳态指标的贡献的实验证据,尤其是在非糖尿病患者中。因此,我们开展了MedGI-Carb试验,这是一项多中心(意大利、瑞典和美国)针对患有至少两种代谢综合征成分(腰围升高+另一成分)的成年人的干预试验,旨在通过饮食调整改善葡萄糖稳态指标。所有参与者被随机分配,食用等热量的高GI或低GI的MED-HEP,为期12周。我们假设,与高GI的MED-HEP相比,低GI的MED-HEP能更有效地改善胰岛素血症指标(主要结局:标准化早餐和午餐后的餐后胰岛素和葡萄糖;次要结局:空腹血糖和胰岛素、糖化血红蛋白、24小时连续血糖监测)。此外,我们假设食用MED-HEP会改善心脏代谢健康和幸福感的其他指标(空腹血压、空腹血脂谱、睡眠质量、饱腹感、血浆代谢组中的整体代谢变化、肠道微生物群的变化、主观健康和幸福感),且两组之间无差异。总体而言,MedGI-Carb试验的设计允许探索几个不同的研究问题。试验注册:ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT03410719。