grant

Targeting food cue responsiveness for weight loss

Organization UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGOLocation LA JOLLA, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Sept 2020Deadline 31 Aug 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY202421+ years oldActive Follow-upAdultAdult HumanAfter CareAfter-TreatmentAftercareAppetiteAwarenessBMIBMI percentileBMI z-scoreBehaviorBehavior Conditioning TherapyBehavior ModificationBehavior TherapyBehavior TreatmentBehavioralBehavioral Conditioning TherapyBehavioral ModificationBehavioral TherapyBehavioral TreatmentBody Weight decreasedBody mass indexCaloric IntakeCognitionConditioning TherapyCoping SkillsCuesDataDesire for foodEatingEducational ActivitiesEffectivenessEnergy IntakeEnvironmentEquationExhibitsExposure toFailureFoodFood IntakeGoalsHungerHyperphagiaIndividualLaboratoriesMaintenanceMeasuresMediatorMedicalModelingMonitorObesityOver weightOvereatingOverweightParticipantPathway interactionsPatient Self-ReportPerceptionPhenotypePhysical activityPhysiologic PsychologyPhysiological PsychologyPredispositionProtocolProtocols documentationPsychophysiologicalPsychophysiologyQuetelet indexRandomizedRandomized, Controlled TrialsRegulationResearchRisk FactorsSatiationSelf-ReportSusceptibilityTechniquesTestingTimeTrainingTreatment EfficacyWeightWeight LossWeight Reductionacceptability and feasibilityactive comparatoractive comparison controlactive followupadiposityadult adiposityadult obesityadulthoodadults with obesityarmbehavior interventionbehavior phenotypebehavioral interventionbehavioral phenotypingbody weight losscaloric dietary contentclinical decision-makingcoping strategycorpulencecravingcue reactivitydemographicsdesigndesigningdevelop therapydiet restrictiondietary restrictioneating in absence of hungerefficacy testingfollow upfollow-upfollowed upfollowupimprovedintervention armintervention developmentintervention efficacynovelnutritionobesity interventionobesity therapyobesity treatmentpathwayphysiopsychologypolyphagiapost treatmentprogramspsycho-physiologicalpsychoeducationpsychologicpsychologicalrandomisationrandomizationrandomized control trialrandomly assignedrecruitresponserestricted dietsatietyskills trainingstandard carestandard treatmentsuccesstargeted drug therapytargeted drug treatmentstargeted therapeutictargeted therapeutic agentstargeted therapytargeted treatmenttheoriestherapeutic efficacytherapy developmenttherapy efficacytraittreatment armtreatment developmenttreatment effecttreatment grouptreatment programweight loss interventionweight loss programweight loss programmingweight loss therapyweight loss treatmentweightswt-loss
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

ABSTRACT
Two out of every three adults has overweight or obesity, which is associated with significant medical and

psychological consequences. To date, the most successful weight loss treatment is behavioral weight loss

(BWL), which includes nutrition and physical activity education, as well as behavior therapy techniques.

Although some adults lose weight in these programs, one third to one half do not respond with even bleaker

rates of weight loss maintenance over time. These low success rates suggest that there are underlying

mechanisms, such as appetitive traits, that may interfere with response to BWL and underscore the critical

need to develop targeted models for the treatment of obesity. Our data suggest that high food responsiveness

(FR) is a risk factor for failure in BWL. We have developed a new model for the treatment of obesity based on

the Behavioral Susceptibility Theory, called Regulation of Cues (ROC), that focuses on decreasing FR and

improving satiety responsiveness (SR). In this study, we propose to recruit adults with overweight and obesity

who also exhibit high levels of FR to test the efficacy of an enhanced ROC treatment program (ROC+) for this

specific behavioral phenotype. We propose a 3 arm randomized controlled trial that will compare ROC+, BWL

and an active comparator (AC). We will recruit and randomize 300 adults with overweight and obesity and will

assess them at baseline, during treatment, post-treatment, and at 6- and 12-month follow-up. Primary and

secondary aims are as follows. Primary Aim 1: Compare ROC+ to AC on body mass index (BMI) over the

course of treatment and follow-up. Primary Aim 2: Compare ROC+ to BWL on body mass index (BMI) over the

course of treatment and follow-up. Secondary Aim 1: Compare BWL to AC on body mass index (BMI) over the

course of treatment and follow-up. Secondary Aim 2: Compare ROC+, BWL and AC on sensitivity to satiety,

sensitivity to food cues, inhibition, restriction, caloric intake, and overeating over the course of the treatment

and follow-up. Exploratory aim 1: Evaluate effects of mediators (FR, SR, restriction, overeating) and

moderators (demographics, baseline BMI) of treatment effects on weight loss over time. This program of

research is an important next step in the development of treatments for specific phenotypes of adults with

overweight/obesity, and could change the paradigm of obesity treatment for these individuals. This study will

contribute to the study of appetitive phenotypes of obesity, will provide a targeted treatment for individuals with

high FR, and could inform clinical decision making for adults with obesity.

Grant Number: 5R01DK122504-05
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Kerri Boutelle

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →