Description Module

Description Module

The Description Module contains narrative descriptions of the clinical trial, including a brief summary and detailed description. These descriptions provide important information about the study's purpose, methodology, and key details in language accessible to both researchers and the general public.

Description Module path is as follows:

Study -> Protocol Section -> Description Module

Description Module


Ignite Creation Date: 2025-12-25 @ 1:46 AM
Ignite Modification Date: 2025-12-25 @ 1:46 AM
NCT ID: NCT06800794
Brief Summary: This study aims to explore how food insecurity, a lack of consistent access to enough food, may lead to changes in the body that make it harder to lose weight. The investigators are testing whether providing women experiencing food insecurity with a stable, healthy, and personalized meal plan can improve their metabolism and reduce their motivation to eat unhealthy foods. The hypothesis is that addressing food insecurity with a predictable diet can lower a person's respiratory quotient (a measure of how the body uses energy), promote fat burning, and improve overall health. This research will improve the understanding for how food insecurity contributes to obesity and may lead to better solutions for managing weight in individuals facing these challenges.
Detailed Description: Women who experience food insecurity have unpredictable access to food and often miss meals and go hungry, but paradoxically are at a 50% greater risk for developing obesity than women who are food secure. This is due in part to metabolic and behavioral factors involved in food insecurity. Research suggests unpredictable access to food is associated with: 1) a high respiratory quotient (RQ) indicative of substrate oxidation that favors storage of fat and burning of carbohydrates; 2) an increase in fuel efficiency and a reduced thermic effect of food (TEF); 3) higher relative reinforcing efficacy of food (RREFOOD), due in part to periodic food deprivation that results from unpredictable access to food and being hungry, and 4) a short temporal window that involves making decisions that focus on meeting immediate versus long-term goals, as assessed by delay discounting (DD). While people with food insecurity and obesity should modify their diet, an RQ that favors storage of fat coupled with a reduced TEF, high RREFOOD and high DD may compromise the effects of traditional dietary approaches to weight loss. The goal of this pilot study is to examine the effects of providing a personalized, stable, predictable, low carbohydrate, low glycemic index, high protein, low energy dense diet on changes in metabolic and behavioral factors that characterize low-income women with food insecurity who have obesity, using a novel stepped wedge design. This work extends our research on behavioral and metabolic factors involved in food insecurity, and will provide strong pilot data for a randomized, controlled trial of a novel dietary approach that target factors involved in food insecurity and obesity that can improve weight control and reduce cardiometabolic risk factors. The investigators expect to screen at least 60 women, with an estimated screen failure rate of 80%. A goal for this pilot project is to provide effect sizes for future studies. The sample size was determined based on feasibility constraints, with the understanding that these results will serve as pilot data for a larger, fully powered randomized controlled trial.
Study: NCT06800794
Study Brief:
Protocol Section: NCT06800794