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Study of Fat Tissue's Ability to Take Up Sugar in the Obese Population

Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Glucose Metabolism Disorders
Interventions
Other: Weight Loss
Registration Number
NCT02994459
Lead Sponsor
University of Missouri-Columbia
Brief Summary

People who are obese often have insulin resistance (inability of insulin to properly control blood sugar) and high blood sugar. However, not all people with obesity have this problem. About one-third of people with obesity have normal sugar metabolism (the way your body uses sugar). Similarly, not all people who are lean are also metabolically healthy and a subset of people who are lean are referred to as metabolically abnormal lean (MAL) or metabolically obese lean because they have the abnormalities in glucose metabolism typically associated with obesity. The reasons why some people with obesity have a problem with blood sugar control and others do not are not entirely clear. It is thought that impaired muscle sugar uptake is the main problem related to high blood sugar in people with obesity. However, adipose tissue (fat tissue) also consumes a substantial amount of blood sugar. Therefore, it is unclear whether muscle or adipose tissue (fat tissue) are primarily responsible for altered blood sugar concentrations in persons with metabolically abnormal obesity (MAO) (those with insulin resistance), compared to those with metabolically normal (healthy) obesity (MNO), or whether "healthy" adipose tissue (fat tissue) expansion in MNO people compared with lean people provides a vessel for blood sugar removal that helps maintain normal blood sugar concentration.

Accordingly, the investigators will determine the amount of sugar that is taken up by the body and in the cells of adipose tissue (fat tissue) and muscle by infusing labeled sugar into the blood and looking at its disappearance from blood and appearance in adipose tissue (fat tissue) and muscle. The investigators will also determine how well insulin, a hormone that controls blood sugar, turns on signals that stimulate sugar uptake in fat and muscle cells. These studies will be done after an overnight fast and during an infusion of sugar and insulin (hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp), in sex- and age-matched people who are insulin resistant and insulin sensitive. People with obesity will also be invited to complete a \~10% diet-induced weight loss program and will be studied again after they have achieved the weight loss goal. A group of sex- and age-matched metabolically normal lean participants will serve as control group. An attempt will be made to also study a group of sex- and age-matched metabolically abnormal lean participants.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
90
Inclusion Criteria

All subjects

  • Age: greater than or equal to 18 years but <65 years
  • Weight stable (i.e., ±2 kg for at least 3 months)
  • Sedentary (less than 1 hour of structured exercise per week)
  • No evidence of significant organ system dysfunction or disease (e.g., diabetes, impaired kidney function, cancer, etc.)

In addition, subjects must fulfill all of the following inclusion criteria.

Metabolically Normal Lean

  • BMI greater than or equal to 18.5 but <25.0 kg/m2
  • Fasting blood glucose: <100 mg/dl
  • Blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT: <140 mg/dl
  • HbA1c <5.7 %.

Metabolically Normal Obese, likely insulin sensitive

  • BMI greater than or equal to 30.0 but <45.0 kg/m2
  • Fasting blood glucose: <100 mg/dl
  • Fasting insulin: <20 mU/l
  • Blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT: <140 mg/dl
  • HbA1c <5.7 %.

Metabolically Abnormal Obese, likely insulin resistant

  • BMI greater than or equal to 30.0 but <45.0 kg/m2
  • Fasting blood glucose ≥100 mg/dl or blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT ≥140 mg/dl or fasting insulin >20 µU/mL or HbA1c >5.7 %.

Metabolically Abnormal Lean

  • BMI greater than or equal to 18.5 but <25.0 kg/m2
  • Fasting blood glucose ≥100 mg/dl or blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT ≥140 mg/dl or fasting insulin >20 µU/mL or HbA1c >5.7 %.
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Metabolically Abnormal Obese (likely insulin resistant)Weight Lossi) BMI ≥30.0 but \<45.0 kg/m2; maximum body circumference \<165 cm to ensure subjects fit into the PET/CT and MR scanners; iii) fasting blood glucose: ≥100 mg/dl or blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT: ≥140 or fasting insulin: \>20 µU/mL.
Metabolically Normal Obese (likely insulin sensitive)Weight Lossi) BMI ≥30.0 but \<45.0 kg/m2; maximum body circumference \<165 cm to ensure subjects fit into the PET/CT and MR scanners; iii) fasting blood glucose: \<100 mg/dl; iv) blood glucose 2 h after an OGTT: \<140 mg/dl; v) HbA1c \<5.7 %; vi) fasting insulin: \<20 µU/mL.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Contribution of subcutaneous adipose tissue glucose uptake to whole-body glucose disposal in people who are insulin sensitive or insulin resistant (defined as insulin-mediated glucose disposal rate)Baseline

Comparison of whole body and total adipose tissue glucose disposal rate assessed by using stable isotope labeled glucose tracer infusion in conjunction with dynamic PET imaging

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Washington University School of Medicine

🇺🇸

Saint Louis, Missouri, United States

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