Time restricted eating as a weight loss intervention in adults with obesity

Time-restricted eating (TRE) is a weight management approach in which food is consumed only within a specific period each day. The simplicity of this approach is appealing, but its efficacy is not known. The aim of this pilot cohort study was to assess adherence to TRE and its effects on weight and...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2021-01, Vol.16 (1), p.e0246186-e0246186
Hauptverfasser: Przulj, Dunja, Ladmore, Daniella, Smith, Katie Myers, Phillips-Waller, Anna, Hajek, Peter
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Hajek, Peter
description Time-restricted eating (TRE) is a weight management approach in which food is consumed only within a specific period each day. The simplicity of this approach is appealing, but its efficacy is not known. The aim of this pilot cohort study was to assess adherence to TRE and its effects on weight and lipid profile. Fifty participants with obesity attempted to follow TRE for 12 weeks. Surveys were conducted weekly over the phone to assess treatment adherence and ratings; and at 6 and 12 weeks, participants attended the clinic to be weighed, have their blood pressure taken and provide a blood sample for lipid profile. Treatment results were compared with data from previous comparable cohorts using other weight management methods. Mean age of the participants was 50 (SD = 12.0), mean weight 97kg (SD = 17.1), mean BMI = 35 (SD = 4.0) and most were female (74%). At weeks 6 and 12, 64% and 58% of participants continued to practice TRE on at least five days/week. Using the 'last observation carried forward' imputation, mean (SD) weight loss was 2.0 (1.7) kg and 2.6 (2.6) kg at 6 and 12 weeks. Among participants who provided follow-up data, those who adhered to the intervention for at least five days/week recorded greater weight loss than those with lower adherence (week 6: 2.5 (1.7) vs 1.0 (1.3), p = 0.003; week 12: 3.5 (2.7) vs 1.3 (2.0), p = 0.001). A total of 26% of the sample lost at least 5% of their body weight at 12 weeks. The intervention had no effect on blood pressure or lipid profile. TRE results were modest, but at least on par with those achieved with more complex interventions, and weight loss did not decline at 12 weeks. A formal trial of the intervention is warranted.
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subjects Adults
Biology and Life Sciences
Blood pressure
Body weight
Body weight loss
Breast feeding
Care and treatment
Clinical medicine
Data analysis
Diet
Eating disorders
Editing
Fasting
Food
Funding
Hunger
Intervention
Lifestyles
Lipids
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Obesity
Restrictions
Reviews
Weight control
Weight loss
Weight loss measurement
title Time restricted eating as a weight loss intervention in adults with obesity
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