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Effectiveness of a minimally processed food-based nutritional counselling intervention on weight gain in overweight pregnant women: a randomized controlled trial.
Sartorelli, DS, Crivellenti, LC, Baroni, NF, de Andrade Miranda, DEG, da Silva Santos, I, Carvalho, MR, de Lima, MC, Carreira, NP, Chaves, AVL, Manochio-Pina, MG, et al
European journal of nutrition. 2023;62(1):443-454
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Excessive gestational weight gain exposes the woman and the child to a higher risk of harmful health outcomes in the short and long term. Dietary patterns based on the substitution of meals made with unprocessed or minimally processed foods for the consumption of ultra-processed items can be partly blamed for the exponential global growth in the incidence of obesity. The main aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a nutritional intervention based on encouraging the consumption of unprocessed and minimally processed foods rather than ultra-processed products. This study is a two-armed parallel randomised controlled trial conducted among overweight, pregnant women receiving prenatal care in seven primary health units. Participants (n=350) were randomly allocated into the intervention group (IG) or control group (CG). The women allocated into the IG, in addition to the usual prenatal care, were invited to participate in three individualised nutritional counselling sessions conducted by trained nutritionists. Results show that even though there were more women in the IG who had increased their daily intake of minimally processed foods and vegetables at lunch time when compared to the CG, this was not statistically significant. Additionally, there weren’t any differences between the groups in relation to physical activity. Authors conclude that their study was unprecedented in demonstrating that a nutritional counselling intervention based on the NOVA food classification system, together with the practice of physical activity, is effective in preventing excessive gestational weight gain in overweight pregnant women.
Abstract
PURPOSE This study aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of a nutritional counselling intervention based on encouraging the consumption of unprocessed and minimally processed foods, rather than ultra-processed products, and the practice of physical activities to prevent excessive gestational weight gain in overweight pregnant women. METHODS This was a two-armed, parallel, randomized controlled trial conducted in primary health units of a Brazilian municipality from 2018 to 2021. Overweight, adult pregnant women (n = 350) were randomly assigned to control (CG) or intervention groups (IG). The intervention consisted of three individualized nutritional counselling sessions based on encouraging the consumption of unprocessed and minimally processed foods rather than ultra-processed products, following the NOVA food classification system, and the practice of physical activities. The primary outcome was the proportion of women whose weekly gestational weight gain (GWG) exceeded the Institute of Medicine guidelines. Adjusted logistic regression models were employed. RESULTS Complete data on weight gain were available for 121 women of the IG and 139 of the CG. In modified intention-to-treat analysis, there was a lower chance of the IG women having excessive GWG [OR 0.56 (95% CI 0.32, 0.98), p = .04], when compared to the CG. No between-group differences were observed for the other maternal outcomes investigated. CONCLUSION The present study was unprecedented in demonstrating that nutritional counselling based on the NOVA food classification system, together with encouraging the practice of physical activity, is effective in preventing excessive weight gain in overweight pregnant women. TRIAL REGISTRATION Registered on July 30th 2018 at Brazilian Registry of Clinical Trials (RBR-2w9bhc).
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Effectiveness of a Smartphone App to Promote Healthy Weight Gain, Diet, and Physical Activity During Pregnancy (HealthyMoms): Randomized Controlled Trial.
Sandborg, J, Söderström, E, Henriksson, P, Bendtsen, M, Henström, M, Leppänen, MH, Maddison, R, Migueles, JH, Blomberg, M, Löf, M
JMIR mHealth and uHealth. 2021;9(3):e26091
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Excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) is associated with increased risk of caesarean delivery, gestational diabetes, pre-eclampsia, and obesity in both mother and child. In the last decade, the use of digital technologies (eg, mobile Health [mHealth]) to deliver lifestyle interventions has increased. The aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of the HealthyMoms app on GWG (primary outcome), body fatness, dietary habits (Swedish Healthy Eating Index), moderate-to-vigorous physical activity, glycaemia, and insulin resistance (secondary outcomes) in gestational week 37 among Swedish women. This study is a 2-arm parallel design randomised controlled trial. A total of 305 pregnant women were enrolled and randomised into either the intervention group or the control group. Participants in the intervention group, in addition to standard maternity care, received the HealthyMoms app which is a 6-month program aimed at promoting recommended GWG. Results did not show any statistically significant effect of the app on GWG; however, there was some evidence that women who were overweight or obese before pregnancy gained less weight in the intervention group as compared with the control group. Authors conclude that this intervention, solely delivered through an app, has potential to be useful for promoting a healthy lifestyle during pregnancy in many women while using less resources from health care.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Excessive gestational weight gain (GWG) during pregnancy is a major public health concern associated with negative health outcomes for both mother and child. Scalable interventions are needed, and digital interventions have the potential to reach many women and promote healthy GWG. Most previous studies of digital interventions have been small pilot studies or have not included women from all BMI categories. We therefore examined the effectiveness of a smartphone app in a large sample (n=305) covering all BMI categories. OBJECTIVE To investigate the effectiveness of a 6-month intervention (the HealthyMoms app) on GWG, body fatness, dietary habits, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA), glycemia, and insulin resistance in comparison to standard maternity care. METHODS A 2-arm parallel randomized controlled trial was conducted. Women in early pregnancy at maternity clinics in Östergötland, Sweden, were recruited. Eligible women who provided written informed consent completed baseline measures, before being randomized in a 1:1 ratio to either an intervention (n=152) or control group (n=153). The control group received standard maternity care while the intervention group received the HealthyMoms smartphone app for 6 months (which includes multiple features, eg, information; push notifications; self-monitoring; and feedback features for GWG, diet, and physical activity) in addition to standard care. Outcome measures were assessed at Linköping University Hospital at baseline (mean 13.9 [SD 0.7] gestational weeks) and follow-up (mean 36.4 [SD 0.4] gestational weeks). The primary outcome was GWG and secondary outcomes were body fatness (Bod Pod), dietary habits (Swedish Healthy Eating Index) using the web-based 3-day dietary record Riksmaten FLEX, MVPA using the ActiGraph wGT3x-BT accelerometer, glycemia, and insulin resistance. RESULTS Overall, we found no statistically significant effect on GWG (P=.62); however, the data indicate that the effect of the intervention differed by pre-pregnancy BMI, as women with overweight and obesity before pregnancy gained less weight in the intervention group as compared with the control group in the imputed analyses (-1.33 kg; 95% CI -2.92 to 0.26; P=.10) and completers-only analyses (-1.67 kg; 95% CI -3.26 to -0.09; P=.031]). Bayesian analyses showed that there was a 99% probability of any intervention effect on GWG among women with overweight and obesity, and an 81% probability that this effect was over 1 kg. The intervention group had higher scores for the Swedish Healthy Eating Index at follow-up than the control group (0.27; 95% CI 0.05-0.50; P=.017). We observed no statistically significant differences in body fatness, MVPA, glycemia, and insulin resistance between the intervention and control group at follow up (P≥.21). CONCLUSIONS Although we found no overall effect on GWG, our results demonstrate the potential of a smartphone app (HealthyMoms) to promote healthy dietary behaviors as well as to decrease weight gain during pregnancy in women with overweight and obesity. TRIAL REGISTRATION ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03298555; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03298555. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): RR2-10.2196/13011.
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Combined epigallocatechin-3-gallate and resveratrol supplementation for 12 wk increases mitochondrial capacity and fat oxidation, but not insulin sensitivity, in obese humans: a randomized controlled trial.
Most, J, Timmers, S, Warnke, I, Jocken, JW, van Boekschoten, M, de Groot, P, Bendik, I, Schrauwen, P, Goossens, GH, Blaak, EE
The American journal of clinical nutrition. 2016;104(1):215-27
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The prevalence of obesity and related chronic diseases is continuously increasing. Insulin resistance is a major risk factor for the progression of obesity toward chronic metabolic diseases, including cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. Polyphenols were identified as dietary ingredients with antioxidant properties decades ago. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), which is most abundant in green tea, and resveratrol (RS), which is present in grape skins, have been implicated in the prevention of body weight gain and improvements in markers of insulin sensitivity in human and animal studies. The aim of this randomised control study was to investigate the longer-term effect of EGCG and RES (EGCG+RES) supplementation on metabolic profile, mitochondrial capacity, fat oxidation, lipolysis, and tissue-specific insulin sensitivity. 38 overweight and obese men and women received supplementation with either EGCG+RES (282 and 80 mg/d, respectively) or a placebo for 12 weeks. Before and after the intervention, oxidative capacity, lipid metabolism and insulin sensitivity were measured. EGCG+RES supplementation did not affect the fasting plasma metabolic profile. Although whole-body fat mass was not affected, visceral adipose tissue mass decreased after the intervention compared with placebo. EGCG+RES supplementation significantly increased oxidative capacity in muscle fibres. Fat oxidation and energy expenditure were not significantly affected by EGCG+RES. Finally, EGCG+RES had no effect on insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, suppression of endogenous glucose production, or lipolysis. The authors concluded that 12 weeks of EGCG+RES supplementation increased mitochondrial capacity and stimulated fat oxidation compared with placebo, and this may improve physical condition and play a role in the prevention of weight gain and worsening of insulin resistance in the long term.
Expert Review
Conflicts of interest:
None
Take Home Message:
- 12 wks of EGCG+RES intake increased skeletal muscle oxidative capacity as well as upregulating mitochondrial pathways, which may translate into an improved metabolic risk profile over time because greater mitochondrial capacity has been associated with higher insulin sensitivity in other studies
- The fat oxidation alterations in those taking the active ingredients vs. the placebo group suggests that this intervention could lead to metabolic adaptation towards lipids instead of CHOs as a fuel source, over time.
- EGCG+RES intake attenuated the increase in plasma triacylglycerol levels during the HFMM test, while the levels were significantly increased in the placebo group after 12 wks. This suggests that the intervention may provide positive support for individuals with high triacylglcerol (triglyceride) levels
- The ratio of total cholesterol to HDL cholesterol tended to decrease after EGCG+RES supplementation but not after placebo. Increased total & HDL cholesterol marker for myocardial infarction risk, so this intervention could help with persons who have disordered cholesterol values, and perhaps contribute to reducing their MI risk over time.
Evidence Category:
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A: Meta-analyses, position-stands, randomized-controlled trials (RCTs)
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B: Systematic reviews including RCTs of limited number
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C: Non-randomized trials, observational studies, narrative reviews
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D: Case-reports, evidence-based clinical findings
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E: Opinion piece, other
Summary Review:
- This randomised controlled trial investigated the effect of 12-wk supplementation of combined epigallocatechin-3-gallate and resveratrol (EGCG+RES) on metabolic profile, mitochondrial capacity, fat oxidation, lipolysis, and insulin sensitivity.
- 38 overweight and obese subjects (active ingredient cohort n = 18; placebo n = 20) received 282 mg/d EGCG and 80 mg/d resveratrol; one capsule of each was taken at breakfast and dinner. Subjects were medically screened 10 times in total, including: 3 times before starting supplementation, 3 times during the supplementation period, and 3 in the last week of supplementation.
- EGCG capsules contained 94% epigallocatechin-3-gallate (141 mg/capsule) and resveratrol capsules contained 20% trans-resveratrol (40 mg trans-resveratrol in Polygonum cuspidatum extract/capsule).
- Medical screening included skeletal muscle biopsies (Vastus lateralis), with various tests done to measure oxidative capacity, X-ray absorptionmetry, a high-fat mixed meal (HFMM) test, and an insulin test via hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp; meal intake before screening was standardised.
- Blood probes were also taken, and subjects completed food records; exact kcals per macronutrient were calculated.
Clinical practice applications:
The results of the study, which relate to clinical practice, highlight:
- 12 weeks of ECGC+RES supplementation increased mitochondrial capacity.
- EGCG+RES increased skeletal muscle oxidative capacity as well as protein expression of OxPhos complexes in skeletal muscle.
- EGCG+RES supplementation significantly affected fasting substrate oxidation, whereas fat oxidation declined in the placebo group; this suggests that it could help to improve fat metabolism.
- 12 weeks of ECGC+RES supplementation preserved fasting and postprandial fat oxidation compared with placebo.
- Plasma triacylglycerol levels were not significantly increased in the EGCG+RES cohort on being given an HFMM test after 12 wks, whereas they went up in the placebo group, indicating that this intervention preserved fasting and post-prandial fat oxidation.
- EGCG+RES group tended to decrease visceral adipose tissue mass by ~11% vs. placebo,
- These findings suggest that combined ECGC+RES supplementation might support mitochondrial function and weight loss/insulin sensitivity over a longer period of time
Considerations for future research:
- The EGCG+RES supplementation had no effect on postprandial glucose, insulin and FFA concentrations or local interstitial glucose and glycerol concentrations. Altering the study parameters in the future might identify changes of these markers.
- There was a tendency toward visceral adipose tissue mass decrease that was not considered significant, but altering dosage and length of time of a similar study might result in a more notable outcome related to weight loss, which was a targeted endpoint
- The combined supplements were not found to affect energy expenditure, contrary to a previous study by the same team, which was for a much shorter time period. It would be interesting to identify why this was.
- Complex and numerous gene set enrichment analyses were performed indicating that the most upregulated pathways after EGCG+RES supplementation were related to the Krebs cycle and electron transport chain, whereas pathways related to CHO metabolism were upregulated in the placebo group. This was taken to indicate that the increased mitochondrial capacity after EGCG +RES supplementation is accompanied by changes at the transcriptional and translational levels; further follow-up of this would be useful to know what clinical impact this has longer term
Abstract
BACKGROUND The obese insulin-resistant state is characterized by impairments in lipid metabolism. We previously showed that 3-d supplementation of combined epigallocatechin-3-gallate and resveratrol (EGCG+RES) increased energy expenditure and improved the capacity to switch from fat toward carbohydrate oxidation with a high-fat mixed meal (HFMM) test in men. OBJECTIVE The present study aimed to investigate the longer-term effect of EGCG+RES supplementation on metabolic profile, mitochondrial capacity, fat oxidation, lipolysis, and tissue-specific insulin sensitivity. DESIGN In this randomized double-blind study, 38 overweight and obese subjects [18 men; aged 38 ± 2 y; body mass index (kg/m(2)): 29.7 ± 0.5] received either EGCG+RES (282 and 80 mg/d, respectively) or placebo for 12 wk. Before and after the intervention, oxidative capacity and gene expression were assessed in skeletal muscle. Fasting and postprandial (HFMM) lipid metabolism was assessed by using indirect calorimetry, blood sampling, and microdialysis. Tissue-specific insulin sensitivity was assessed by a hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp with [6,6-(2)H2]-glucose infusion. RESULTS EGCG+RES supplementation did not affect the fasting plasma metabolic profile. Although whole-body fat mass was not affected, visceral adipose tissue mass tended to decrease after the intervention compared with placebo (P-time × treatment = 0.09). EGCG+RES supplementation significantly increased oxidative capacity in permeabilized muscle fibers (P-time × treatment < 0.05, P-EGCG+RES < 0.05). Moreover, EGCG+RES reduced fasting (P-time × treatment = 0.03) and postprandial respiratory quotient (P-time × treatment = 0.01) compared with placebo. Fasting and postprandial fat oxidation was not significantly affected by EGCG+RES (P-EGCG+RES = 0.46 and 0.38, respectively) but declined after placebo (P-placebo = 0.05 and 0.03, respectively). Energy expenditure was not altered (P-time × treatment = 0.96). Furthermore, EGCG+RES supplementation attenuated the increase in plasma triacylglycerol concentrations during the HFMM test that was observed after placebo (P-time × treatment = 0.04, P-placebo = 0.01). Finally, EGCG+RES had no effect on insulin-stimulated glucose disposal, suppression of endogenous glucose production, or lipolysis. CONCLUSION Twelve weeks of EGCG+RES supplementation increased mitochondrial capacity and stimulated fat oxidation compared with placebo, but this did not translate into increased tissue-specific insulin sensitivity in overweight and obese subjects. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02381145.