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Whole Foods for Teens – A Family-Based Dietary Intervention to Reduce Body Adiposity in Adolescents with Obesity


Center Vanderbilt University
Award Year 2025
Pilot Study Whole Foods for Teens – A Family-Based Dietary Intervention to Reduce Body Adiposity in Adolescents with Obesity
Awardee Nadia Sneed PhD ORCiD
Abstract

For adolescents with obesity, a healthy diet pattern is recommended as a first-line non-pharmacological treatment. Yet, despite decades of research, there is inconclusive evidence from randomized clinical trials (RCT) to support an optimal dietary pattern to treat adolescent obesity. While observational data has linked poor-quality diet patterns high in calories, fat, and refined carbohydrates to greater body adiposity in adolescents, some research suggests that dietary patterns that emphasize healthy whole foods (e.g. Mediterranean, low-glycemic load) not only improve diet quality but can also effectively reduce body adiposity and improve metabolic outcomes (e.g., insulin resistance) without the need for calorie restrictions. However, for adolescents with obesity, adherence to a healthy diet pattern requires the involvement of the whole family, with the potential to improve diet quality and reduce body adiposity and its associated metabolic complications. Unfortunately, weaknesses of past studies include 1) a failure to intervene upon diet quality at the family level to modify adolescent dietary behaviors, and 2) a lack of consideration for how individual/family needs and social determinants of health (SDOH) impact diet adoption. To address these gaps, we will test a novel 8-week pilot RCT of a non-calorie-restricted whole foods diet adapted from the 2020- 2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans that offers a simple, customizable MyPlate Plan approach (i.e., 5 daily food group goals) focused on individual, family, cultural, and budgetary preferences. We will recruit 30 eligible adolescent (10-18 years) and parent (≥25 years) pairs to test the diet’s effects on 1) adolescent body adiposity measured with dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) to measure fat mass and anthropometry to measure weight, BMI, and waist circumference (Aim 1) and 2) adolescent and parent diet quality scores measured from dietary recalls using the 2020 Healthy Eating Index during the intervention (Aim 2). Post-intervention family focus groups will be conducted to understand how individual/family needs and preferences and SDOH may be perceived barriers or facilitators of diet adherence in families (Aim 3). Feasibility, acceptability, enrollment, retention, and diet satisfaction data will be generated to establish successful benchmarks to support future studies. Participants randomized to the intervention will receive bi- weekly food delivery, menus, and dietetic support for 8 weeks. Participants randomized to the usual care group will receive a single dietetic counseling session on MyPlate. The successful completion of this study will result in the generation of quantitative and qualitative data to support a future R01 that will test the long-term effectiveness of a whole foods diet on obesity and metabolic outcomes, and diet sustainability in adolescents with obesity and their families.