TREat-CR: Time Restricted Eating and Cardiac Rehabilitation

Sponsor
University of Toronto (Other)
Overall Status
Enrolling by invitation
CT.gov ID
NCT05075317
Collaborator
University Health Network, Toronto (Other)
60
2
2
20.7
30
1.5

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

This study will use a form of intermittent fasting called time-restricted eating (TRE) where individuals consume ad libitum energy intake within a set window of time, commonly 8 hours, which induces a fasting window of 16 hours per day (i.e., 16:8 TRE). TRE could be an effective addition to cardiac rehabilitation as it has demonstrated cardiovascular health benefits and potential for synergy when combined with exercise training. This study will determine if TRE is a feasible and safe nutrition intervention during cardiac rehabilitation and if TRE improves the health benefits of cardiac rehabilitation compared to cardiac rehabilitation alone.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Standard cardiac rehabilitation
  • Behavioral: Time-Restricted Eating
N/A

Detailed Description

HYPOTHESIS

  1. Cardiac rehabilitation and TRE will be feasible in terms of adherence to a 16-hour daily fast (≥70%, which would represent 5/7 days/week) and safe (no excess symptoms or adverse events)

  2. Cardiac rehabilitation and TRE will provide added cardiovascular health benefits (improved VO2peak, reduced fat mass) compared to cardiac rehabilitation alone.

JUSTIFICATION: Past animal and human clinical trials have demonstrated TRE to be beneficial in realigning circadian rhythm, improve coronary artery disease (CAD) through the reduction in calorie intake, and promote cell signalling and repair pathways during the fasting period. TRE has not been tested in patients with CAD or other heart diseases but has shown to improve comorbid conditions (diabetes and hypertension) and improve metabolic profiles (blood pressure, hemoglobin A1c, fasting glucose, insulin sensitivity, and lipid profiles. Additionally, TRE when combined with exercise, such as in cardiac rehabilitation programs, improves VO2 peak and reduces fat mass compared to exercise alone. The proposed study will deliver a TRE intervention in combination with the cardiac rehabilitation program and is expected to be feasible, safe, and improve outcomes of cardiac rehabilitation.

OBJECTIVES: The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility (adherence) and safety (adverse events) of TRE in combination with cardiac rehabilitation.

The secondary aim is to assess the efficacy of the intervention on:
  1. VO2peak, body composition, fasted glucose, hemoglobin A1c, blood pressure and waist circumference

  2. Lifestyle behavioral change outcomes (dietary intake, dietary quality, physical activity, perceived stress)

4.Cardiac rehabilitation adherence

Exploratory aims of the study include identifying sex differences (equal recruitment of males and females) and participants' experience with TRE (including confidence in maintaining this eating pattern or modifications to increase adherence).

RESEARCH METHOD This study will be a two-site (Toronto Rehabilitation Institute and Toronto Western Hospital), 2-arm, parallel-group, randomized feasibility trial of cardiac rehabilitation alone or cardiac rehabilitation plus 16:8 TRE. Men and women who are referred through the standard clinical pathways for coronary artery disease and are willing to accept random assignment and complete the study assessments will be enrolled. Both groups will receive the standard, multi-dimensional cardiac rehabilitation program consisting of physician-directed risk factor management, an individualized exercise prescription, and virtual education. Participants randomized to the TRE group will be asked to eat only between 11 am and 7 pm for the duration of the cardiac rehabilitation program (~16 weeks). Adherence will be collected via twice daily text messages asking participants to respond with the time they started and stopped eating. Safety will be collected by self-report and medical records. Efficacy outcomes will be assessed by cardiopulmonary exercise test, blood draw, dual x-ray absorptiometry, 3-day diet records, accelerometers, and questionnaires. Study outcomes will be measured at baseline and at the end of the cardiac rehabilitation program.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Participant characteristics will be summarized using descriptive statistics. For adherence, both the text message response rate and adherence rate to the 16-hour daily fast will be reported. The change in caloric intake, diet quality, physical activity and efficacy outcomes will be compared between groups by analysis of covariance with baseline values as covariates. Relative risk will be used to compare the incidence of safety outcomes between groups. The primary analysis will be intention to treat and performed with both sexes combined. Secondary analyses will be performed separately in each sex.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
60 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Time Restricted Eating and Cardiac Rehabilitation
Actual Study Start Date :
Jul 11, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Dec 31, 2023
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Mar 31, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Active Comparator: Standard cardiac rehabilitation

The 16-week program consists of physician-directed risk factor management, an individualized aerobic and resistance exercise prescription, and virtual education on disease management and lifestyle behaviors (including exercise safety, stress management, and heart-healthy nutrition), and an assessment with a registered dietitian and individualized recommendations for a heart-healthy diet. Additionally, selected patients with identified issues such as depression, anxiety, trouble sleeping, anger and social and emotional issues will receive one-on-one counselling with a psychologist or social worker.

Behavioral: Standard cardiac rehabilitation
Standard, multi-dimensional cardiac rehabilitation program.

Experimental: Standard cardiac rehabilitation + TRE

Participants in this group will receive the same standard assessment and individualized recommendations as the comparator group, but will also be counselled to restrict their eating to between 11 am and 7 pm during the program starting the evening of the consultation. They will also be advised to perform their home-based exercise sessions during the fasting period in the morning.

Behavioral: Standard cardiac rehabilitation
Standard, multi-dimensional cardiac rehabilitation program.

Behavioral: Time-Restricted Eating
Counselling to restrict their eating to between 11 am and 7 pm and to consume water-only for the remaining 16 hours per day

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Adherence to the daily ≥16-hour fast for the 16-weeks of the cardiac rehabilitation program. [Averaged over the 16 weeks of the intervention]

    Assessed daily through a custom twice daily automated text message (or email) program, or written logs for those without cell phones. Adherence will be measured as a % of days with ≥16-hour fast.

  2. Cardiorespiratory fitness as measured by peak volume of oxygen consumption (VO2peak) [16 weeks]

    Assessed by an incremental, to-maximum cardiopulmonary treadmill exercise test.

  3. Fat mass [16 weeks]

    Assessed by dual absorptiometry x-ray (DXA) scan.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Symptoms from TRE [16 weeks]

    Self-report of various nutritional impact adverse events collected at support phone calls for both groups

  2. Seattle Angina Questionnaire score [16 weeks]

    Standard scoring of Seattle Angina Questionnaire (minimum = 0, maximum = 100, higher score means better outcome)

  3. Adverse events [1-year]

    re-hospitalizations, recurrent cardiac events, death extracted from medical records

  4. Fat-free mass [16 weeks]

    Assessed by dual absorptiometry x-ray (DXA) scan.

  5. Hemoglobin A1c [16 weeks]

    Measured by blood draw

  6. Blood pressure [16 weeks]

    Systolic and diastolic blood pressure will manually assessed as the average of the 2nd to 6th measurements

  7. Waist circumference [16 weeks]

    Measured by an inelastic tape at the level of the top of iliac crest as the average of two measurements

  8. Fasted blood glucose [16 weeks]

    Measured by fasted blood draw

  9. Metabolic syndrome [16 weeks]

    As defined by the NCEP/ATP III criteria

  10. Lipid profile [16 weeks]

    Individual measures and ratios of total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein, low-density lipoprotein, triglycerides from fasted blood draw

  11. Health-related quality of life measured by the RAND-36 Physical Component Summary [16 weeks]

    Physical component summary of the RAND-36 questionnaire (minimum = 0, maximum = 50, higher score is better outcome)

Other Outcome Measures

  1. Macronutrient ratios [16 weeks]

    3-day food record analysed by food analysis software to estimate macronutrient intake

  2. Caloric intake [16 weeks]

    3-day food record analysed by food analysis software to estimate intake

  3. Cardiac rehabilitation adherence [16 weeks]

    The participant's clinical chart for the cardiac rehabilitation program will be reviewed to extract adherence data to the standard components of the program (exercise, nutrition, education, social worker)

  4. Time-restricted eating experience [16 weeks]

    At the end of the intervention, the TRE group will complete a researcher developed questionnaire that asks questions about acceptability of TRE and confidence in continuing the intervention long-term

  5. Mediterranean Diet Score [16 weeks]

    Standard scoring of 14-item Mediterranean Diet Score Tool (minimum = 0, maximum = 14, higher score indicates better outcome)

  6. Physical activity and sedentary time [16 weeks]

    Participants will wear an accelerometer device for 5 days with 3 full days used for analysis

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Men and women who are referred and eligible for either the outpatient cardiac rehabilitation program for coronary artery disease

  • willing to accept random assignment and complete the study assessments

  • Equal numbers of men and women will be recruited

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Inability to complete the consent form and communicate in English

  • Self-reported history of an eating disorder

  • Current or recent (1 year) pregnancy or breast feeding

  • Body mass index <18.5 kg/m^2 or clinical signs of cachexia

  • Contraindications or inability to perform cardiopulmonary exercise testing

  • Type 1 diabetes

  • Type 2 diabetes that requires exogenous insulin

  • Working night or rotating shifts

  • Eating window <12 hours or consistently eating less than 3 meals/day in the past 3 months

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada M4G 1R7
2 Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network Toronto Ontario Canada M5T 2S8

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of Toronto
  • University Health Network, Toronto

Investigators

  • Study Director: Paul Oh, MD, University Health Network, Toronto
  • Principal Investigator: Amy Kirkham, PhD, University of Toronto, KITE Research Institute

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Amy Kirkham, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05075317
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 21-5510
First Posted:
Oct 12, 2021
Last Update Posted:
Jul 20, 2022
Last Verified:
Jul 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Keywords provided by Amy Kirkham, Assistant Professor, University of Toronto
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jul 20, 2022