| Literature DB >> 28106818 |
Michelle Harvie1, Anthony Howell2.
Abstract
Intermittent energy restriction (IER) has become popular as a means of weight control amongst people who are overweight and obese, and is also undertaken by normal weight people hoping spells of marked energy restriction will optimise their health. This review summarises randomised comparisons of intermittent and isoenergetic continuous energy restriction for weight loss to manage overweight and obesity. It also summarises the potential beneficial or adverse effects of IER on body composition, adipose stores and metabolic effects from human studies, including studies amongst normal weight subjects and relevant animal experimentation. Six small short term (<6 month) studies amongst overweight or obese individuals indicate that intermittent energy restriction is equal to continuous restriction for weight loss, with one study reporting greater reductions in body fat, and two studies reporting greater reductions in HOMA insulin resistance in response to IER, with no obvious evidence of harm. Studies amongst normal weight subjects and different animal models highlight the potential beneficial and adverse effects of intermittent compared to continuous energy restriction on ectopic and visceral fat stores, adipocyte size, insulin resistance, and metabolic flexibility. The longer term benefits or harms of IER amongst people who are overweight or obese, and particularly amongst normal weight subjects, is not known and is a priority for further investigation.Entities:
Keywords: fasting; intermittent energy restriction; weight gain; weight loss
Year: 2017 PMID: 28106818 PMCID: PMC5371748 DOI: 10.3390/bs7010004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Search strategy.
| # | Searches | Results |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | ((intermittent or “alternate day” or modified) adj1 (fasting or diet or “energy restriction” or “calor* restriction”)).mp. [mp=title, abstract, original title, name of substance word, subject heading word, keyword heading word, protocol supplementary concept word, rare disease, supplementary concept word, unique identifier] | 854 |
| 2 | (body adj1 (fat or weight)).mp. [mp=title, abstract, original title, name of substance word, subject heading word, keyword heading word, protocol supplementary concept word, rare disease supplementary concept word, unique identifier] | 308923 |
| 3 | (fat adj1 (liver or hepatic)).mp. [mp=title, abstract, original title, name of substance word, subject heading word, keyword heading word, protocol supplementary concept word, rare disease supplementary concept word, unique identifier] | 2661 |
| 4 | "ectopic fat".mp. | 445 |
| 5 | (“fat free mass” or “muscle mass”).mp. [mp=title, abstract, original title, name of substance word, subject heading word, keyword heading word, protocol supplementary concept word, rare disease supplementary concept word, unique identifier] | 15776 |
| 6 | “resting energy expenditure”.mp. | 2708 |
| 7 | Insulin/ or insulin.mp. | 340396 |
| 8 | “metabolic flexibility”.mp. | 371 |
| 9 | body weight/ or exp body weight changes/ or exp overweight/ | 365308 |
| 10 | exp Adipose Tissue/ | 82804 |
| 11 | Insulin/ or Insulin Resistance/ | 199942 |
| 12 | exp Calorimetry, Indirect/ or exp Basal Metabolism/ or exp Energy Metabolism/ or exp Energy Intake/ | 361348 |
| 13 | 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 or 7 or 8 or 9 or 10 or 11 or 12 | 1115315 |
| 14 | 1 and 13 | 424 |
Randomised weight loss trials of intermittent energy restriction compared to isoenergetic continuous energy restriction in people who are obese or overweight.
| Reference | IER Regimens | Study Population | Study Design | Primary End Point and Power of the Study | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N, Gender, Age | Baseline BMI (kg/m2) | Diet Groups (N) | Level of Support | Duration of Study | |||
| Hill et al. 1989 [ | 3–7 day periods of alternating 70%, 60%, 45%, and 10% ER. Overall 40% CER | 40 women (32 completers) | 31 (3.0) | IER = 10 | 12 weekly group meetings. Menus provided. | 12 weeks intervention and follow up 6 months after the weight loss programme | Weight loss |
| Ash et al. 2003 [ | 4 consecutive days/week 50% ER (4.18 MJ liquid very low calorie diet 3 days/week, | 51 men with | 31.2 (3.4) | IER vs. 2 types of 30% CER | Face to face visit the clinic dietitian and physician fortnightly and telephone contact with the dietitian on intervening weeks. | 12 weeks | Weight loss |
| Varady et al. 2011 [ | Alternate days of 75% ER (1.67–2.50 MJ/day) and AL low fat/American Heart Association diet: 30% kcal fat, 15% kcal protein, 55% kcal carbohydrate. | 51 women and 9 men | 32 (2.0) | IER = 15 (pre-portioned meals on fast days) | No information | 12 weeks | LDL and HDL particle |
| Harvie et al. 2011 [ | 2 consecutive days/week 70% ER (2.73 MJ/day, 50 g protein: | 107 premenopausal women | 30.6 (5.1) | IER = 53 | Fortnightly motivational phone calls and monthly | 26 weeks | Insulin resistance |
| Harvie et al. 2013 [ | IECR: 2 consecutive days/week 70% ER (energy and carbohydrate restriction: 2.73 MJ/day, 70 g protein, 50 g carbohydrate) | 115 women | 31 (5.0) | IECR = 37 | Fortnightly motivational phone calls and monthly | 13 weeks weight loss phase. | Insulin resistance |
| Carter et al. 2016 [ | IECR 2 days per week 1.67–2.5 MJ/day (70%–85% restriction) and habitual eating for 5 days | 63 | 35 (4.8) | IECR = 31 + exercise (2000 steps) | Asked to record dietary intake throughout the 12-week study. | 12 weeks | HbA1c |
Mean (SD); IER, intermittent energy restriction; CER, continuous energy restriction; IECR, intermittent energy and carbohydrate restriction; IECR + PF, intermittent energy and carbohydrate restriction and ad libitum protein and MUFA.
Adherence, weight loss and changes in metabolic markers in randomised trials of intermittent energy restriction compared to isoenergetic continuous energy restriction in people who are obese or overweight.
| Outcomes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | Dropout % of Subjects | Dietary Adherence Methodology | Final Analysis | Weight change Mean (SD) | Change in Body Fat and fat Free Mass (FFM) Method of Assessment | Metabolic Effects |
| Hill et al. 1989 [ | 12 weeks/6 months after intervention | 12 week diet records | Completers analysis | 12 week data Combined IER/CER diet only groups | Body density from underwater weighing | Equal reductions in blood pressure and triglycerides |
| Ash et al. 2003 [ | IER = 0% | 24 hour recalls | Completers as no drop outs | IER = CER | DEXA | Reduced HbA1c and triglycerides |
| Varady et al. 2011 [ | IER = 13% | No data | BOCF | IER −5.2 ± 1.1% | No data | Increase in LDL particle size |
| Harvie et al. 2011 [ | IER = 20% | IER 7 day food diaries at baseline, 1, 3 and 6 months | LOCF | IER = CER | Bioelectrical impedance | Reduction in HOMA insulin resistance |
| Harvie et al. 2013 [ | IECR = 11% | 7 day food diaries at baseline, 1, 3 and 4 months | LOCF | No difference in % weight loss between groups at | Bioelectrical impedance reduction in body fat mass at 12 weeks | Reduction in HOMA insulin resistance |
| Carter et al. 2016 [ | IECR 16% | No data | ITT | IECR −6.2 (3.6)% | DEXA | HbA1C |
Mean (SD); IECR + PF, intermittent energy and carbohydrate restriction and ad libitum protein and MUFA; BOCF, baseline observation carried forward; LOCF, last observation carried forward; HOMA, Homeostasis Model Assessment; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; DEXA, dual energy x ray absorptiometry.
Figure 1Degree of dietary energy restriction with IER in Manchester studies. The IER cohort undertook a 70% energy restriction on two consecutive days per week and additionally undertook an unplanned carry-over energy restriction to an average of 20% below their baseline intake on the remaining five days of the week (solid line). The restricted days and the unplanned carry-over energy restriction resulted in an equivalent overall 35% energy restriction over the trial period (dashed line).
Summary of research findings and gaps in research comparing intermittent energy restriction/intermittent fasting to CER for weight control and metabolic health.
| Outcome | Effects in People Who Are Obese or Overweight | Effects in People Who Are Normal Weights | Effects in Rodent Studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weight loss/prevention of weight gain | IER = CER for weight loss in six studies which were not powered to detect differences in weight. The study finding are suggestive but not conclusive of no difference between IER and CER weight [ | No long term data | N/A |
| Proportion of body fat stored as visceral and subcutaneous fat | No data | No data | Mixed results: |
| Fat cell size | No data | No data | Reduced in male C57BL/6J mice [ |
| Hepatic fat | No data | Modest increase after a single 24 h fast in men not women [ | Mixed results: |
| Intra myocellular triglycerides | No data | Modest increase after a single 48 hour fast in women but not men [ | No data |
| Insulin sensitivity | Mixed results | Mixed results | Mixed results |
| Fat free mass | IER = CER [ | No data | No data |
| Resting energy expenditure | IER = CER [ | No comparison data | No data |
| Metabolic flexibility | No data | No data | IER > CER [ |
IER, intermittent energy restriction; CER, continuous energy restriction; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; N/A, not applicable.