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Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)

Psychosocial status and lifestyle are key risk factors of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which, in turn, are main drivers of healthcare costs and morbimortality worldwide, including Chile. Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is one of the healthiest dietary patterns under study. However, its impact on h...

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Autores principales: Echeverría, Guadalupe, Samith, Bárbara, von Schultzendorf, Andrea, Pinto, Victoria, Martínez, Ximena, Sara, Daniela, Calzada, Mariana, Pacheco, Josefina, Plaza, Gianella, Scott, Francesca, Romero, Javiera, Mateo, Camila, Julio, María Verónica, Utreras-Mendoza, Yildy, Binder, María Victoria, Gutiérrez, Florencia, Riquelme, María Emilia, Cuevas, Margarita, Willatt, Rosario, Sánchez, Omayra, Keilendt, Aracelli, Butrón, Patricia, Jarufe, Alessandra, Huete, Isidora, Tobar, Josefina, Martin, Sofía, Alfaro, Valentina, Olivos, Matilde, Pedrals, Nuria, Bitran, Marcela, Ávalos, Ivette, Ruini, Chiara, Ryff, Carol, Pérez, Druso, Berkowitz, Loni, Rigotti, Attilio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10393605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37538196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2023.101167
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author Echeverría, Guadalupe
Samith, Bárbara
von Schultzendorf, Andrea
Pinto, Victoria
Martínez, Ximena
Sara, Daniela
Calzada, Mariana
Pacheco, Josefina
Plaza, Gianella
Scott, Francesca
Romero, Javiera
Mateo, Camila
Julio, María Verónica
Utreras-Mendoza, Yildy
Binder, María Victoria
Gutiérrez, Florencia
Riquelme, María Emilia
Cuevas, Margarita
Willatt, Rosario
Sánchez, Omayra
Keilendt, Aracelli
Butrón, Patricia
Jarufe, Alessandra
Huete, Isidora
Tobar, Josefina
Martin, Sofía
Alfaro, Valentina
Olivos, Matilde
Pedrals, Nuria
Bitran, Marcela
Ávalos, Ivette
Ruini, Chiara
Ryff, Carol
Pérez, Druso
Berkowitz, Loni
Rigotti, Attilio
author_facet Echeverría, Guadalupe
Samith, Bárbara
von Schultzendorf, Andrea
Pinto, Victoria
Martínez, Ximena
Sara, Daniela
Calzada, Mariana
Pacheco, Josefina
Plaza, Gianella
Scott, Francesca
Romero, Javiera
Mateo, Camila
Julio, María Verónica
Utreras-Mendoza, Yildy
Binder, María Victoria
Gutiérrez, Florencia
Riquelme, María Emilia
Cuevas, Margarita
Willatt, Rosario
Sánchez, Omayra
Keilendt, Aracelli
Butrón, Patricia
Jarufe, Alessandra
Huete, Isidora
Tobar, Josefina
Martin, Sofía
Alfaro, Valentina
Olivos, Matilde
Pedrals, Nuria
Bitran, Marcela
Ávalos, Ivette
Ruini, Chiara
Ryff, Carol
Pérez, Druso
Berkowitz, Loni
Rigotti, Attilio
author_sort Echeverría, Guadalupe
collection PubMed
description Psychosocial status and lifestyle are key risk factors of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which, in turn, are main drivers of healthcare costs and morbimortality worldwide, including Chile. Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is one of the healthiest dietary patterns under study. However, its impact on high-risk conditions, such as metabolic syndrome (MetS), and NCDs outside the Mediterranean Basin remains mostly unexplored. Even though Central Chile has an environment, food production, and culinary traditions comparable to those present in Mediterranean countries, few studies -some with significant methodological limitations- have evaluated the effect of MedDiet on health and/or disease in Chilean subjects. Importantly, a Mediterranean lifestyle is a modus vivendi that integrates physical health with mental and social well-being. Psychological well-being (PWB) is associated with healthy behaviors, positive health outcomes, and longevity, thereby emerging as a novel healthcare goal. We report here an ongoing randomized controlled clinical trial in Chilean patients with MetS seeking to test whether (1) a PWB theory-based intervention facilitates induction to and increases long-term adherence to a locally adapted MedDiet, and (2) a MedDiet intervention -implemented alone or combined with well-being promotion- is more effective at reversing MetS compared to individuals following a low-fat diet without psychological support. The CHILEan MEDiterranean (CHILEMED) diet intervention study is a 1-year trial including patients with MetS living in Chile. Participants will be assigned randomly by a computer-generated random number sequence to one of the three intervention arms: a) low-fat diet as control group, b) MedDiet alone, and c) MedDiet plus well-being support. Patients will be followed-up by individual and/or group online nutritional sessions or phone cal as well as 6- and 12-month in-person re-assessment of medical history, medication use, food intake, PWB, anthropometrics/physical exam, and blood collection for laboratory analysis. The primary outcome of the trial will be the effect of the MedDiet -with or without PWB intervention- on overall reversal of MetS compared to low-fat diet alone. Based on a statistical superiority trial, expected impact, and patient loss, the estimated study sample is 339 subjects (113 individuals per arm in 3 equal-sized groups). Currently, we have enrolled 179 patients, predominantly women, evenly distributed by age (group means ranging from 45.7 to 48,9 years-old), 3/4 are obese with almost all of them showing abdominal obesity, 70% are hypertensive, whereas <10% exhibit diabetes. If findings turn out as expected (e.g., MedDiet -with or without PWB intervention- is better than the low-fat diet for reversion of MetS at 1-year follow-up), CHILEMED will provide further beneficial evidence of the MedDiet on NCD risk conditions beyond the Mediterranean region.
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spelling pubmed-103936052023-08-03 Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial) Echeverría, Guadalupe Samith, Bárbara von Schultzendorf, Andrea Pinto, Victoria Martínez, Ximena Sara, Daniela Calzada, Mariana Pacheco, Josefina Plaza, Gianella Scott, Francesca Romero, Javiera Mateo, Camila Julio, María Verónica Utreras-Mendoza, Yildy Binder, María Victoria Gutiérrez, Florencia Riquelme, María Emilia Cuevas, Margarita Willatt, Rosario Sánchez, Omayra Keilendt, Aracelli Butrón, Patricia Jarufe, Alessandra Huete, Isidora Tobar, Josefina Martin, Sofía Alfaro, Valentina Olivos, Matilde Pedrals, Nuria Bitran, Marcela Ávalos, Ivette Ruini, Chiara Ryff, Carol Pérez, Druso Berkowitz, Loni Rigotti, Attilio Contemp Clin Trials Commun Article Psychosocial status and lifestyle are key risk factors of non-communicable diseases (NCDs), which, in turn, are main drivers of healthcare costs and morbimortality worldwide, including Chile. Mediterranean diet (MedDiet) is one of the healthiest dietary patterns under study. However, its impact on high-risk conditions, such as metabolic syndrome (MetS), and NCDs outside the Mediterranean Basin remains mostly unexplored. Even though Central Chile has an environment, food production, and culinary traditions comparable to those present in Mediterranean countries, few studies -some with significant methodological limitations- have evaluated the effect of MedDiet on health and/or disease in Chilean subjects. Importantly, a Mediterranean lifestyle is a modus vivendi that integrates physical health with mental and social well-being. Psychological well-being (PWB) is associated with healthy behaviors, positive health outcomes, and longevity, thereby emerging as a novel healthcare goal. We report here an ongoing randomized controlled clinical trial in Chilean patients with MetS seeking to test whether (1) a PWB theory-based intervention facilitates induction to and increases long-term adherence to a locally adapted MedDiet, and (2) a MedDiet intervention -implemented alone or combined with well-being promotion- is more effective at reversing MetS compared to individuals following a low-fat diet without psychological support. The CHILEan MEDiterranean (CHILEMED) diet intervention study is a 1-year trial including patients with MetS living in Chile. Participants will be assigned randomly by a computer-generated random number sequence to one of the three intervention arms: a) low-fat diet as control group, b) MedDiet alone, and c) MedDiet plus well-being support. Patients will be followed-up by individual and/or group online nutritional sessions or phone cal as well as 6- and 12-month in-person re-assessment of medical history, medication use, food intake, PWB, anthropometrics/physical exam, and blood collection for laboratory analysis. The primary outcome of the trial will be the effect of the MedDiet -with or without PWB intervention- on overall reversal of MetS compared to low-fat diet alone. Based on a statistical superiority trial, expected impact, and patient loss, the estimated study sample is 339 subjects (113 individuals per arm in 3 equal-sized groups). Currently, we have enrolled 179 patients, predominantly women, evenly distributed by age (group means ranging from 45.7 to 48,9 years-old), 3/4 are obese with almost all of them showing abdominal obesity, 70% are hypertensive, whereas <10% exhibit diabetes. If findings turn out as expected (e.g., MedDiet -with or without PWB intervention- is better than the low-fat diet for reversion of MetS at 1-year follow-up), CHILEMED will provide further beneficial evidence of the MedDiet on NCD risk conditions beyond the Mediterranean region. Elsevier 2023-06-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10393605/ /pubmed/37538196 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2023.101167 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Echeverría, Guadalupe
Samith, Bárbara
von Schultzendorf, Andrea
Pinto, Victoria
Martínez, Ximena
Sara, Daniela
Calzada, Mariana
Pacheco, Josefina
Plaza, Gianella
Scott, Francesca
Romero, Javiera
Mateo, Camila
Julio, María Verónica
Utreras-Mendoza, Yildy
Binder, María Victoria
Gutiérrez, Florencia
Riquelme, María Emilia
Cuevas, Margarita
Willatt, Rosario
Sánchez, Omayra
Keilendt, Aracelli
Butrón, Patricia
Jarufe, Alessandra
Huete, Isidora
Tobar, Josefina
Martin, Sofía
Alfaro, Valentina
Olivos, Matilde
Pedrals, Nuria
Bitran, Marcela
Ávalos, Ivette
Ruini, Chiara
Ryff, Carol
Pérez, Druso
Berkowitz, Loni
Rigotti, Attilio
Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title_full Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title_fullStr Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title_full_unstemmed Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title_short Mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in Chile (CHILEMED trial)
title_sort mediterranean diet and psychological well-being intervention to reverse metabolic syndrome in chile (chilemed trial)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10393605/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37538196
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.conctc.2023.101167
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