Department of Experimental and Clinical Medicine, University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Department of Bioscience and Technology for Food, Agriculture and Environment, University of Teramo, Teramo, Italy.
Trials. 2024 Sep 30;25(1):641. doi: 10.1186/s13063-024-08470-6.
The Mediterranean diet (MD), globally recognized for its sustainability and health benefits, traditionally emphasizes the consumption of plant-based foods in raw or minimally processed forms. However, shifting lifestyles, even in Mediterranean regions, have led to an increasing consumption of ultra-processed foods (UPF). Epidemiological evidence suggests that UPF consumption may be detrimental to human health, but there is only one clinical trial on this topic which is largely debated in the scientific community. This study aims to investigate the impact of the inclusion of UPF within a Mediterranean-based dietary pattern on cardiometabolic markers, gut microbiota, and other markers of human and planet health.
Fifty clinically healthy individuals showing overweight and presenting a low-to-moderate cardiovascular risk profile will be recruited for a 7-month randomized, open, cross-over dietary trial. Eligible participants will be randomly assigned to a 3-month high-UPF MD (intervention group) or a low-UPF MD (control group), with a 1-month wash-out period. Both intervention diets will have identical food group compositions, with the intervention group consuming 5 servings/day of selected UPF items, and the control group consuming raw/minimally processed items from the same food group. Blood, urine, and fecal samples, alongside food/lifestyle diaries, will be collected from each participant before and after the dietary interventions. The primary endpoint will be the change in plasma LDL-cholesterol levels from baseline. Additional markers include blood pressure, anthropometric parameters, chemical parameters, glucose and lipid-related metabolic markers, incretins, inflammatory and oxidative stress markers, fecal microbiota composition, and short-chain fatty acids. Finally, food waste production will be evaluated through specific validated food diaries. The study has been approved by the Ethical Committee of the University of Milan and the Tuscany Regional Ethics Committee of the Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria (AOU) - Careggi, Florence.
Results from the PROMENADE study will improve knowledge about the impact of UPF consumption on human and planet health and will contribute to the scientific debate on this topic.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06314932. Registered on March 13, 2024.
地中海饮食(Mediterranean diet,MD)在全球范围内因其可持续性和健康益处而受到认可,传统上强调以生的或最低限度加工形式食用植物性食物。然而,即使在地中海地区,生活方式的转变也导致了超加工食品(ultra-processed foods,UPF)的消费不断增加。流行病学证据表明,UPF 的消费可能对人类健康有害,但关于这个主题只有一项临床试验,这在科学界引起了广泛的争论。本研究旨在调查在基于地中海饮食模式中纳入 UPF 对心血管代谢标志物、肠道微生物群以及人类和地球健康其他标志物的影响。
将招募 50 名临床健康的超重个体,他们具有低至中度心血管风险特征,参加为期 7 个月的随机、开放、交叉饮食试验。符合条件的参与者将被随机分配到高 UPF MD(干预组)或低 UPF MD(对照组)3 个月,期间有 1 个月的洗脱期。两种干预饮食的食物组组成相同,干预组每天食用 5 份选定的 UPF 项目,对照组食用相同食物组的生/最低限度加工项目。在饮食干预前后,将从每位参与者收集血液、尿液和粪便样本以及食物/生活方式日记。主要终点是从基线到血浆 LDL-胆固醇水平的变化。其他标志物包括血压、人体测量参数、化学参数、葡萄糖和脂质相关代谢标志物、肠降血糖素、炎症和氧化应激标志物、粪便微生物群组成和短链脂肪酸。最后,将通过特定的验证食物日记评估食物浪费的产生。该研究已获得米兰大学伦理委员会和佛罗伦萨 Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria(AOU)-Careggi 托斯卡纳地区伦理委员会的批准。
PROMENADE 研究的结果将提高对 UPF 消费对人类和地球健康影响的认识,并为该主题的科学争论做出贡献。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06314932。于 2024 年 3 月 13 日注册。