Effects of early, late and self-selected time-restricted eating on visceral adipose tissue and cardiometabolic health in participants with overweight or obesity: a randomized controlled trial

Date

2025-01-07

Authors

Dote-Montero, Manuel
Clavero-Jimeno, Antonio
Merchán Ramírez, Elisa
Camacho-Cardenosa, Alba
Amaro Gahete, Francisco J.
López-Vázquez, Alejandro

Director

Publisher

Nature Research
Acceso abierto / Sarbide irekia
Artículo / Artikulua
Versión aceptada / Onetsi den bertsioa

Project identifier

  • AEI/Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2021-2023/PID2022-141506OB-I00/ES/ recolecta
  • Gobierno de Navarra//0011-1365-2021-00070/
Impacto
No disponible en Scopus

Abstract

The optimal eating window for time-restricted eating (TRE) remains unclear, particularly its impact on visceral adipose tissue (VAT), which is associated with cardiometabolic morbidity and mortality. We investigated the effects of three TRE schedules (8 h windows in the early day, late day and participant-chosen times) combined with usual care (UC, based on education about the Mediterranean diet) versus UC alone over 12 weeks in adults with overweight or obesity. The primary outcome was VAT changes measured by magnetic resonance imaging. A total of 197 participants were randomized to UC (n = 49), early TRE (n = 49), late TRE (n = 52) or self-selected TRE (n = 47). No significant differences were found in VAT changes between early TRE (mean difference (MD): −4%; 95% confidence interval (CI), −12 to 4; P = 0.87), late TRE (MD: −6%; 95% CI, −13 to 2; P = 0.31) and self-selected TRE (MD: −3%; 95% CI, −11 to 5; P ≥ 0.99) compared with UC, nor among the TRE groups (all P ≥ 0.99). No serious adverse events occurred; five participants reported mild adverse events. Adherence was high (85–88%) across TRE groups. These findings suggest that adding TRE, irrespective of eating window timing, offers no additional benefit over a Mediterranean diet alone in reducing VAT. TRE appears to be a safe, well-tolerated and feasible dietary approach for adults with overweight or obesity. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT05310721.

Description

Keywords

Adult, Diet Mediterranean, Fasting, Female, Intra-abdominal fat, Diagnostic imaging, Magnetic resonance imaging, Middle aged, Obesity, Diet therapy, Overweigh, Time factors

Department

Ciencias de la Salud / Osasun Zientziak / Institute on Innovation and Sustainable Development in Food Chain - ISFOOD / Ingeniería Eléctrica, Electrónica y de Comunicación / Ingeniaritza Elektrikoa, Elektronikoa eta Telekomunikazio Ingeniaritza / Agronomía, Biotecnología y Alimentación / Agronomia, Bioteknologia eta Elikadura

Faculty/School

Degree

Doctorate program

item.page.cita

Dote-Montero, M., Clavero-Jimeno, A., Merchán-Ramírez, E., Oses, M., Echarte, J., Camacho-Cardenosa, A., Concepción, M., Amaro-Gahete, F. J., Alcántara, J. M. A., López-Vázquez, A., Cupeiro, R., Migueles, J. H., De-la-O, A., García Pérez, P. V., Contreras-Bolivar, V., Muñoz-Garach, A., Zugasti, A., Petrina, E., Alvarez de Eulate, N., Goñi, E., Armendariz-Brugos, C., González Cejudo, M. T., Martín-Rodríguez, J. L., Idoate, F., Cabeza, R., Carneiro-Barrera, A., Cabo, R. de, Muñoz-Torres, M., Labayen, I., Ruiz, J. R. (2025) Effects of early, late and self-selected time-restricted eating on visceral adipose tissue and cardiometabolic health in participants with overweight or obesity: a randomized controlled trial. Nature Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03375-y.

item.page.rights

© 2025, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc.

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