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The Effects of Time-Restricted Eating versus Standard Dietary Advice on Weight, Metabolic Health and the Consumption of Processed Food: A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial in Community-Based Adults

Nicholas E. Phillips, Julie Mareschal, Nathalie Schwab, Emily N. C. Manoogian, Sylvie Borloz, Giada Ostinelli, Aude Gauthier-Jaques, Sylvie Umwali, Elena González Rodríguez, Daniel Aeberli, Didier Hans, Satchidananda Panda, Nicolas Rodondi, Félix Naef, Tinh‐Hai Collet

Nutrients · 2021 · ▲ 102 citations

Abstract

Weight loss is key to controlling the increasing prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MS) and its components, i.e., central obesity, hypertension, prediabetes and dyslipidaemia. The goals of our study were two-fold. First, we characterised the relationships between eating duration, unprocessed and processed food consumption and metabolic health. During 4 weeks of observation, 213 adults used a smartphone application to record food and drink consumption, which was annotated for food processing levels following the NOVA classification. Low consumption of unprocessed food and low physical activity showed significant associations with multiple MS components. Second, in a pragmatic randomised controlled trial, we compared the metabolic benefits of 12 h time-restricted eating (TRE) to standard dietary advice (SDA) in 54 adults with an eating duration > 14 h and at least one MS component. After 6 months, those randomised to TRE lost 1.6% of initial body weight (SD 2.9, p = 0.01), compared to the absence of weight loss with SDA (−1.1%, SD 3.5, p = 0.19). There was no significant difference in weight loss between TRE and SDA (between-group difference −0.88%, 95% confidence interval −3.1 to 1.3, p = 0.43). Our results show the potential of smartphone records to predict metabolic health and highlight that further research is needed to improve individual responses to TRE such as a shorter eating window or its actual clock time.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.3390/nu13031042
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2026-06-15 MST

Cite this

APA
Phillips, N.E., Mareschal, J., Schwab, N., Manoogian, E.N.C., Borloz, S., Ostinelli, G., Gauthier-Jaques, A., Umwali, S., Rodríguez, E.G., Aeberli, D., Hans, D., Panda, S., Rodondi, N., Naef, F., &amp; Collet, T. (2021). The Effects of Time-Restricted Eating versus Standard Dietary Advice on Weight, Metabolic Health and the Consumption of Processed Food: A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial in Community-Based Adults. <em>Nutrients</em>. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13031042
Vancouver
Phillips NE, Mareschal J, Schwab N, Manoogian ENC, Borloz S, Ostinelli G, et al. The Effects of Time-Restricted Eating versus Standard Dietary Advice on Weight, Metabolic Health and the Consumption of Processed Food: A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial in Community-Based Adults. Nutrients. 2021. doi:10.3390/nu13031042.
BibTeX
@article{nicholas2021TheEff, title = {The Effects of Time-Restricted Eating versus Standard Dietary Advice on Weight, Metabolic Health and the Consumption of Processed Food: A Pragmatic Randomised Controlled Trial in Community-Based Adults}, author = {Nicholas E. Phillips and Julie Mareschal and Nathalie Schwab and Emily N. C. Manoogian and Sylvie Borloz and Giada Ostinelli and Aude Gauthier-Jaques and Sylvie Umwali and Elena González Rodríguez and Daniel Aeberli and Didier Hans and Satchidananda Panda and Nicolas Rodondi and Félix Naef and Tinh‐Hai Collet}, journal = {Nutrients}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.3390/nu13031042}, }

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