NCT06406270

Brief Summary

The world's population needs adequate food supply to sustain food security. The availability of sufficient dietary protein is undeniably a source of concern for human health. This study aimed to assess the satiety and potential health benefits of two types of vegetarian diets when the meat was replaced with buckwheat and respectively fava bean for one-week in the diet of healthy volunteers.

Trial Health

100
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
20

participants targeted

Target at P25-P50 for not_applicable healthy

Timeline
Completed

Started Jun 2014

Typical duration for not_applicable healthy

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

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Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

Study Start

First participant enrolled

June 6, 2014

Completed
1.3 years until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

September 30, 2015

Completed
3 months until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

December 30, 2015

Completed
7.9 years until next milestone

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

November 20, 2023

Completed
6 months until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

May 9, 2024

Completed
Last Updated

May 9, 2024

Status Verified

May 1, 2024

Enrollment Period

1.3 years

First QC Date

November 20, 2023

Last Update Submit

May 6, 2024

Conditions

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (5)

  • The suitability of a vegetarian diet (buckwheat and fava bean based) to deliver sufficient nutrients per day

    The suitability of a vegetarian diet (buckwheat and fava bean based) to deliver sufficient nutrients per day such as protein composition, amino acids composition, fibre composition, types of NSP, and daily requirements minerals, microelements, and other bioactive such as polyphenolic phytochemicals. The macronutrient composition, including the dry matter, ash, fat, total carbohydrate, resistant starch, crude protein, and total non-starch polysaccharides of the buckwheat and fava-bean diets are measured in grams per day. The amino acid composition was measured in grams per day and the main micronutrients expressed in mg ± SD per day are measured in fava bean and buckwheat diets using quantitative ICP-MS analysis.

    7-days

  • Satiety levels following the consumption of buckwheat and fava bean-based diets.

    Appetite scores were measured hourly during the waking hours (0700-2300) with the use of visual analogue scales (VASs) during both the habitual diet week and the intervention weeks (fava bean-based and buckwheat-based diets). Six questions were asked on motivation to eat, all in the line scale format related to hunger, thirst, preoccupation with thoughts of food, fullness, desire to eat, and prospective consumption. The scales ranged from "not at all hungry" to "extremely hungry," so higher scores indicated more intense subjective sensations. These questionnaires were completed by the subjects each day of the study.

    every hour for 16 hours during the day for 7 days

  • Hourly hunger scores analysed using VAS

    Hunger scores were measured hourly during the waking hours (0700-2300) with the use of visual analogue scales (VASs) during both the habitual diet week and the intervention weeks (fava bean-based and buckwheat-based diets). Six questions were asked on motivation to eat, all in the line scale format related to hunger, thirst, preoccupation with thoughts of food, fullness, desire to eat, and prospective consumption. The scales ranged from "not at all hungry" to "extremely hungry," so higher scores indicated more intense subjective sensations. These questionnaires were completed by the subjects each day of the study.

    every hour for 16 hours during the day for 7 days

  • Concentrations of plasma, urine, and faecal samples of microbial metabolites of carbohydrates, protein, and bioactive phytochemicals.

    Concentrations of plasma, urine, and faecal samples of microbial metabolites of carbohydrates, protein and bioactive phytochemicals from the diets at day 0 and day 7 in fasted plasma, urine and faecal samples. Furthermore looked at fermentation products of carbohydrates in faecal samples. Average concentration was measured by targeted LC-MS/MS and expressed as pg/μl.

    Baseline and day 7

  • Gut microbiota composition: Bacterial DNA extraction and sequencing using 16sRNA to determine the bacterial composition following the two different vegetarian-based diets.

    The total number of 16S rRNA gene copies per ml and abundance of several bacterial genera or species of the communities in the anaerobic faecal incubation experiments was determined by quantitative PCR with 2 ng DNA in a total volume of 10 μl and expressed as 16S rRNA gene copies per ml of culture. The abundance of total faecal microbiota and specific genera were reported during habitual (baseline) diet and intervention diets consumption.

    7-days

Secondary Outcomes (3)

  • Values concentration (μM) of fasted homocysteine

    7-days

  • Values concentration (mmol/l) of fasted lipids, urea, and glucose

    7-days

  • Values concentration (pmol/l) of fasted insulin

    7-days

Study Arms (2)

Fava-based diet

EXPERIMENTAL

At the end of the morning of each intervention visit, participants were provided with meals, which they consumed for seven consecutive days (in a 4-day rotation menu). Participants were instructed to consume only the meals that were provided to them during the study days. The breakfast, lunch and dinner meals of the diets were designed to contain 30% fat, 15% protein, 55% carbohydrate, and seven different menus (1500, 1750, 2000, 2250, 2500, 2750 and 3000 Kcal) to deliver the closest energy requirements of the volunteers. For the intervention diets, all the meat was replaced with buckwheat and fava bean food products, serving the same amount of buckwheat and fava bean food products for all the volunteers regardless of their energy requirements.

Other: Fava

Buckwheat-based diet

EXPERIMENTAL

At the end of the morning of each intervention visit, participants were provided with meals, which they consumed for seven consecutive days (in a 4-day rotation menu). Participants were instructed to consume only the meals that were provided to them during the study days. The breakfast, lunch and dinner meals of the diets were designed to contain 30% fat, 15% protein, 55% carbohydrate, and seven different menus (1500, 1750, 2000, 2250, 2500, 2750 and 3000 Kcal) to deliver the closest energy requirements of the volunteers. For the intervention diets, all the meat was replaced with buckwheat and fava bean food products, serving the same amount of buckwheat and fava bean food products for all the volunteers regardless of their energy requirements.

Other: Buckwheat

Interventions

FavaOTHER

Participants were instructed to consume only the meals that were provided to them during the study days. The breakfast, lunch and dinner meals of the diets were designed to contain 30% fat, 15% protein, and 55% carbohydrate, and seven different menus (1500, 1750, 2000, 2250, 2500, 2750 and 3000 Kcal) to deliver the closest energy requirements of the volunteers. For the intervention diets, all the meat was replaced with fava bean food products, serving the same amount of buckwheat and fava bean food products for all the volunteers independently of their energy requirements. During the intervention diets, all the drinks, such as coffee, juice and tea, were restricted and provided by the Human Nutrition Unit at the Rowett Institute; the volunteers were allowed to drink only water ad libitum. Alcoholic drinks were not allowed to be consumed during the intervention diet weeks.

Fava-based diet

Participants were instructed to consume only the meals that were provided to them during the study days. The breakfast, lunch and dinner meals of the diets were designed to contain 30% fat, 15% protein, and 55% carbohydrate, and seven different menus (1500, 1750, 2000, 2250, 2500, 2750 and 3000 Kcal) to deliver the closest energy requirements of the volunteers. For the intervention diets, all the meat was replaced with buckwheat food products, serving the same amount of buckwheat and fava bean food products for all the volunteers independently of their energy requirements. During the intervention diets, all the drinks, such as coffee, juice and tea, were restricted and provided by the Human Nutrition Unit at the Rowett Institute; the volunteers were allowed to drink only water ad libitum. Alcoholic drinks were not allowed to be consumed during the intervention diet weeks.

Buckwheat-based diet

Eligibility Criteria

Age18 Years - 65 Years
Sexall
Healthy VolunteersYes
Age GroupsAdult (18-64), Older Adult (65+)

You may qualify if:

  • Healthy males and females,
  • Non-vegetarian,
  • non-smokers,
  • age 18-65
  • with BMI 18-35 kg/m.

You may not qualify if:

  • vegetarian,
  • smoker,
  • having known allergies,
  • using prescription drugs.
  • diabetes,
  • gastrointestinal disorders,
  • kidney disease,
  • hepatic disease,
  • favism,
  • alcohol or
  • substance abuse

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
NONE
Purpose
BASIC SCIENCE
Intervention Model
CROSSOVER
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
SPONSOR

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

November 20, 2023

First Posted

May 9, 2024

Study Start

June 6, 2014

Primary Completion

September 30, 2015

Study Completion

December 30, 2015

Last Updated

May 9, 2024

Record last verified: 2024-05

Data Sharing

IPD Sharing
Will not share