| Literature DB >> 27338458 |
Michelle Headland1, Peter M Clifton2, Sharayah Carter3, Jennifer B Keogh4.
Abstract
The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis is to summarise the effects of intermittent energy restriction on weight and biological markers in long term intervention studies of >6 months duration. An electronic search was performed using the MEDLINE, EMBASE and the Cochrane Library databases for intervention trials lasting 6 months or longer investigating the effects of intermittent energy restriction. A total of nine studies were identified as meeting the pre-specified criteria. All studies included an intermittent energy restriction arm, with six being directly compared to continuous energy restriction. A total of 981 subjects were enrolled and randomised, with weight loss observed in all intermittent energy restriction arms regardless of study duration or follow up length. Eight interventions in six trials were used for the meta-analyses, with results indicating neither intermittent or continuous energy restriction being superior with respect to weight loss, 0.084 ± 0.114 (overall mean difference between groups ± standard error; p = 0.458). The effects of intermittent energy restriction in the long term remain unclear. The number of long term studies conducted is very limited, and participant numbers typically small (less than 50 completers), indicating the need for larger, long term trials of 12 months or more, to be conducted in order to understand the impact of intermittent energy restriction on weight loss and long term weight management. Blood lipid concentrations, glucose, and insulin were not altered by intermittent energy expenditure in values greater than those seen with continuous energy restriction.Entities:
Keywords: diet; intermittent energy restriction; weight loss
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27338458 PMCID: PMC4924195 DOI: 10.3390/nu8060354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram of study selection.
Study Outlines.
| Reference | Study Design | Study Participants | Prescribed Regimen | Outcome Measures | Intervention Adherence | Effects of Intervention | Weight Change | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Start | End | ||||||||
| Arguin | Randomized, controlled, parallel study of 5 weeks intervention, 5 weeks stabilization phase, and 1 year follow up. | F | 22 | 20 | BW, BC, WC, RMB, lipid profile, glucose | Not reported. | ↓† seen in TC and triglycerides in both groups after initial 5 weeks intervention. | ||
| Ash | Randomised, controlled, parallel-arm study of 3, 12 weeks interventions and 18 months follow up | M | 51 | 27 * | BW, BC, WC, HbA1C, triglycerides | Not reported. | Mean ↓ in energy intake (2369 ± 2793 kJ/day, | ||
| Harvie | Randomised, controlled, parallel study of a 6 months intervention | F | 107 | 89 | BW, insulin sensitivity and metabolic disease risk markers | Comparable ↓ noted for leptin, CRP, TC, LDL-C, triglycerides, and BP compared to baseline values for each group. | |||
| Hill | Randomised four-arm parallel study of 12 weeks with follow up at 26 weeks | F | 40 | 32 | BW, BC, REE, TC, Triglycerides, glucose, insulin | 95% of participants who completed the study. | FM ↓ during the study with no difference between diets (6.1 ± 0.6 | ||
| Keogh | Parallel, randomized control trial, of 8 weeks with a 12-month follow-up. | F | 75 | 36 | BW, BC, diet quality scores | 24 women (12 from each treatment group) did not adhere to the diet for the 44 weeks between 8 weeks and follow-up. | ↓ in waist and hip circumference over time ( | In completers only: | |
| Lantz | Randomised, parallel study of 2 years trial. | MF | 334 | 117 | VLED (1890 kJ/day) for 16 weeks, VLED for 2 weeks every third month (Intermittent). | BW, FFM, BP, glucose, insulin, TC, HDL-C, LDL-C, triglycerides | Not reported. | No significant differences between the groups at baseline or over time. | |
| Rossner | Randomised parallel, controlled trial of 18 weeks with follow up at 14 and 26 weeks | MF | 101 | 81 | TRIAL 1—Women only | BW | Measured via urinary ketone bodies, but results not reported. | - | |
| Wing | Randomised, two—arm parallel study of 50 weeks + 2 years follow up. | MF | 93 | 79 | BW, glucose, BP, lipids | Not reported. | ↓ in cholesterol for both groups from baseline after 1 year † with greater difference seen in the LCD group ( | At 50 weeks follow up | |
| Wing | Randomised 3-arm parallel study of 20 weeks IER and 14 weeks CER, with follow-up at 20 & 48 weeks. | MF | 142 | 96 | 68% of Long Break IER, 70% Short Break IER, & 64% CER | Posttreatment (5 months) | |||
* Please note: all participants analysed as a whole group. PPM, removal of food preparation cues; SSM, usual dietetic intervention. ∏ LB, long break; SB, short break. † p < 0.05.
Figure 2Average weight loss of subjects at the final data collection point for the IER arm of each study.
Figure 3Meta-Analysis: Mean difference in weight loss after IER relative to CER arms within each study.