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Whey Protein Study - Identification of Sustainable Satiety

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Satiety
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Control
Dietary Supplement: HPL
Dietary Supplement: LPL
Dietary Supplement: LPS
Dietary Supplement: HPS
Registration Number
NCT02246543
Lead Sponsor
University of Aberdeen
Brief Summary

This study will have the primary aim to investigate within-day changes in appetite after consumption of high-protein (HP, 30% of calories) and normal, or low, protein (LP, 15% of calories) whey protein meal, in solid and liquid form, on appetite and ad libitum food intake. Secondary objective will be to assess the statistical relationship between plasma concentrations of gut hormones and visual analogue scales (subjective hunger and fullness) and transit time.

In order to investigate the interaction of food structure and protein content on appetite, this requires, in practice, either a differing amount (g) or calorie (kJ) load as a function of energy density (defined as kJ/100g). Delivering the test meal as a solid and liquid form gives an easy solution to achieve this manipulation without compromising the nutritional profile. Following on from this decision, it is easier to produce different preloads using whey protein (rather than meat protein), since it is easily incorporated into test meals.

Detailed Description

A randomized crossover design in 10 overweight/obese (BMI 26-40) men and 10 lean men (BMI 18.5-25). The control will be water. Each subject will attend the HNU on six separate occasions. The five test meal challenges will involve subjects attending the Human Nutrition Unit (HNU) in the morning, after an overnight fast. The total time of test meal visits will be approximately 4½hours. They will be provided with a standardised meal, after which blood samples will be collected for the first 2hrs. The following five treatments will be tested:

Treatment 1 Control - Water + Egg Yolk Mixture + 13C Octanoic Acid Treatment 2 HPL (High Protein Liquid): 30% protein; 30% fat and 40% carbohydrate (CHO) Treatment 3 LPL (Low Protein Liquid): 15% protein; 30% fat and 55% CHO Treatment 4 HPS (High Protein Solid): 30% protein; 30% fat and 40% CHO Treatment 5 LPS (Low Protein Solid): 15% protein; 30% fat and 55% CHO Test meals will be of fixed nutritional composition for all participants. The liquid meal will be a milk/fruit smoothie mixture and the 'solid' will be in a milk jelly (set) form.

Ad libitum pasta meal: 15% protein; 30% fat and 55% CHO as a homogenous mix and energy density of around 400kJ/100g - served in excess as a individual 600g portion to 'help-yourself'.

Subjective average appetite will be measured (every 30 min by visual analogue scales) over 4hr and ad libitum food intake will measured 4hr after treatment consumption. Ad libitum lunch will be a homogenous pasta meal with tomato sauce and a bottle of water. Blood samples will be collected every 10 min for the first half hour, every 15 min for the second half hour and every 30mins subsequently. The breath gastric emptying measurement will be assessed using the 13Carbon (13C) Octanoic Acid stable isotopic technique19. This involves mixing the tracer into food and taking breath samples and measured by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. 13C Octanoic acid is a medium chain fatty acid which is rapidly absorbed in the duodenum and metabolised in the liver. Following oxidation, the resulting Carbon Dioxide (CO2) is excreted into breath (12 samples will be collected during the 4hr test day).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Male
Target Recruitment
13
Inclusion Criteria
  • BMI = 18.5-40kg/m2
Exclusion Criteria
  • Diabetes
  • Severe gastrointestinal disorders
  • Kidney disease
  • Thromboembolic or coagulation disease
  • Hepatic disease
  • Alcohol or any other substance abuse
  • Gout
  • Eating disorders
  • Food allergy
  • Unregulated thyroid disease
  • Psychiatric disorders (including severe depression, lithium treatment, schizophrenia, severe behavioural disorders)
  • Vegetarians & Vegans

Medication Exclusion Criteria:

  • Orlistat (Xenical)
  • Oral antidiabetics, insulin
  • Rimonabant (Acomplia)
  • Digoxin, anti-arrhythmics
  • Sibutramine (Reductil)
  • Tricyclic antidepressants, neuroleptics

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Treatment 1 - ControlControlWater, Toast \& Egg (Yolk only) + 0.1g 13C Octanoic Acid
Treatment 2 - HPLHPLHigh Protein Smoothie (Liquid): 30% protein; 30% fat and 40% CHO + 0.1g 13C Octanoic Acid
Treatment 3 - LPLLPLLow Protein Smoothie (Liquid): 15% protein; 30% fat and 55% CHO + 0.1g 13C Octanoic Acid
Treatment 5 - LPSLPSLow Protein Milk Jelly (Solid): 15% protein; 30% fat and 55% CHO + 0.1g 13C Octanoic Acid
Treatment 4 - HPSHPSHigh Protein Milk Jelly (Solid): 30% protein; 30% fat and 40% CHO + 0.1g 13C Octanoic Acid
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in postprandial biomarkers of satiety as measured by gut-related hormonesOn each test day blood samples are collected every 10 min for the first half hour, every 15 min for the second half hour and every 30mins subsequently. (Eight samples are therefore collected for 2hours at T0, T10, T20, T30, T45, T60, T90 and T120mins)

The biomarkers to be measured on the Luminex system are Ghrelin (active), Glucagon-like peptide (GLP1), Peptide YY (PYY), Amylin, Leptin \& Insulin

Biomarkers of Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) risk including total cholesterol, Low Density Lipoprotein Cholesterol (LDL), High Density Lipoprotein (HDL), triglycerides, nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) will also be measured along with assessment of peripheral glycaemic control, fasting glucose, area under the curve combined with insulin data.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Changes in postprandial gastric emptying, measured using breath samplesOn each test day samples are collected every 15mins for the first 2½hrs then every 30mins for the last ½hr. Therefore samples are collected for a total of 3hours at T0, T15, T30, T45, T60, T75, T90, T105, T120, T135, T150 and T180mins.

This is assessed using the 13C Octanoic Acid stable isotopic technique. A tracer is mixed into food and breath samples are collected which are analysed by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. 13C Octanoic acid is a medium chain fatty acid which is rapidly absorbed in the duodenum and metabolised in the liver. Following oxidation, the resulting CO2 is excreted into breath (12 samples will be collected during the 4hr test day).

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Rowett Institute of Nutrition & Health, University of Aberdeen

🇬🇧

Aberdeen, Aberdeen City, United Kingdom

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