Executive Functioning, Weight Trajectories, and Loss of Control Eating in Children With Overweight/Obesity: A Prospective Study

Status: Recruiting
Location: See all (2) locations...
Intervention Type: Behavioral
Study Type: Observational
SUMMARY

Overweight/obesity and loss of control eating (characterized by the sense that one cannot control what or how much one is eating) are prevalent among children and adolescents, and both are associated with serious medical and psychosocial health complications. Although our recently published data suggest that youth with these conditions may have relative deficits in neurocognitive functioning, particularly working memory, understanding of how these processes and their neural correlates are related to change and stability in eating and weight-related outcomes over time is limited, thereby impeding development of targeted, optimally timed interventions. The present study aims to assess prospective associations between general and food-specific executive functioning and underlying neural substrates, and eating and weight outcomes among children at varying levels of risk overweight/obesity and eating disorders, which will help guide research efforts towards the development of effective prevention and intervention strategies.

Eligibility
Participation Requirements
Sex: All
Minimum Age: 9
Maximum Age: 12
Healthy Volunteers: t
View:

• Not currently taking any medications known to affect weight or appetite

• Free of any current or past medical or psychiatric conditions known to significantly affect eating or weight (e.g., diabetes, bulimia nervosa), with the exception of binge eating disorder

• In the low average range or higher on measures of general intellectual functioning

• Free of any conditions affecting executive functioning (e.g., recent concussion, history of traumatic brain injury)

• Fluent in English, and able to read and comprehend study materials

• Not currently pregnant

Locations
United States
Pennsylvania
University of PIttsburgh
RECRUITING
Pittsburgh
Rhode Island
Weight Control & Diabetes Research Center
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Providence
Contact Information
Primary
Erin Stalvey, B.S.
stalveyer@upmc.edu
412-586-9066
Backup
Chloe Hudson, B.S.
bitelab@upmc.edu
412-586-9082
Time Frame
Start Date: 2020-12-10
Estimated Completion Date: 2025-12-09
Participants
Target number of participants: 180
Treatments
Normal Weight Control, no MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile under 85% who are not randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Normal Weight Control with MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile under 85% who are randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Overweight Control, no MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile at 85% or higher who are not randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Overweight Control with MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile at 85% or higher who are randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Overweight/Obese Experimental, no MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile at 85% or higher, who report loss of control eating episodes and are not randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Overweight/Obese Experimental with MRI-scan (30 participants)
Adolescents with a BMI percentile at 85% or higher, who report loss of control eating episodes and are randomly assigned to undergo MRI scans at baseline and 18-months.
Authors
Elissa Jelalian
Related Therapeutic Areas
Sponsors
Collaborators: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), The Miriam Hospital, Brown University
Leads: University of Pittsburgh

This content was sourced from clinicaltrials.gov