Time-Restricted Eating, Exercise and Cardiometabolic Health in Obesity

NCT05897073 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 187

Last updated 2025-11-20

No results posted yet for this study

Summary

In Spain, overweight and obesity prevalence is reaching 70% in men and 50% in women. Excess of triglycerides are usually stored in the subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT), until a point where SAT is unable to expand further. Therefore, lipids are deposited in visceral and other peripheral organs and tissues that are not otherwise designed for adipose storage such as the liver, pancreas or the skeletal muscle, a process known as ectopic fat deposition. "Time-restricted eating" (TRE) is a recently emerged intermittent fasting approach which has the potential to maximize the beneficial metabolic effects extensively reported for energy intake restriction. Furthermore, exercise reduces hepatic steatosis and improves cardiometabolic health in humans. However, whether the effects of TRE combined with exercise on reducing hepatic steatosis are superior to TRE or exercise intervention alone remains unknown. The TEMPUS study will investigate the effects of a 12-week TRE combined with supervised exercise intervention, as compared with TRE or exercise alone, and usual-care control group, on hepatic fat (primary outcome) and cardiometabolic health (secondary outcomes) in adults with obesity; and to unveil the role of gut microbiota.

Conditions

  • Time Restricted Feeding
  • Exercise
  • Hepatic Steatosis
  • Cardiometabolic Syndrome
  • Obesity

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Time-restricted eating intervention

Participants will be asked to reduce their daily eating time window to a maximum of 8 hours/day. They can choose when to begin their eating window but will be advised that the last meal should be completed before or at 20:00 hours. No calorie-containing food or beverage intake will be allowed outside the 8 hours eating window.

BEHAVIORAL

Exercise intervention

The exercise intervention will include 2 days/week of supervised moderate-high intensity resistance training (rating perceived exertion \>7, circuit-training, upper and lower body exercises involving major muscle groups) and high-intensity interval training (4 sets of 4-minute intervals at \>85% peak heat rate with 4-minute of active recovery at 50-65% peak heat rate, uphill treadmill walking). This intervention has already been tested previously in our lab. Moreover, participants will receive an individualized moderate-intensity goal-setting aerobic (walking) program consisting of increasing 15% daily steps per week.

BEHAVIORAL

Time-restricted eating plus exercise intervention

Participants will be asked to reduce their daily eating time window to a maximum of 8 hours/day. They can choose when to begin their eating window but will be advised that the last meal should be completed before or at 20:00 hours. No calorie-containing food or beverage intake will be allowed outside the 8 hours eating window. The exercise intervention will include 2 days/week of supervised moderate-high intensity resistance training (rating perceived exertion \>7, circuit-training, upper and lower body exercises involving major muscle groups) and high-intensity interval training (4 sets of 4-minute intervals at \>85% peak heat rate with 4-minute of active recovery at 50-65% peak heat rate, uphill treadmill walking). This intervention has already been tested previously in our lab. Moreover, participants will receive an individualized moderate-intensity goal-setting aerobic (walking) program consisting of increasing 15% daily steps per week.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Universidad de Granada

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Jonatan R. Ruiz, PhD · Universidad de Granada

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
25 Years
Max Age
65 Years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2023-05-02
Primary Completion
2024-07-27
Completion
2025-09-05

Countries

  • Spain

Study Locations

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Entities

Diseases

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT05897073 on ClinicalTrials.gov