(Press-News.org) The Buck Institute for Research on Aging has received a $3.5 million federal grant to lead the first-ever double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial to understand the effects of ketone ester supplementation on frailty, a condition of vulnerability which develops following age-related decline in multiple physiological systems. TAKEOFF (Targeting Aging with Ketone Ester in Older Adults for Function in Frailty) will recruit a total of 180 people at the Buck, Ohio State University and the University of Connecticut Center on Aging.
“TAKEOFF will be the biggest and most rigorous study of any ketone intervention in older adults,” said Buck assistant professor John Newman, MD, PhD, , who is the principal investigator on the grant. “We are very excited to test this approach in a human population that is at risk for becoming frail, a condition which increases the risks of all sorts of serious problems in older adults from falls and life-threatening infections to becoming disabled and losing independence after surgery.” Newman added, “If TAKEOFF proves the biology, it should open the door for interventions for other conditions of aging that share similar mechanisms.”
Noting the overall interest and excitement about ketogenic diets and ketogenic supplementation in the general population, Newman points out that human data on the effects of both the diet and supplementation in older adults is mostly anecdotal and very limited. “Putting aging mice on a ketogenic diet dramatically improves muscle fitness and brain health, but mice are not people; we need to see if the science holds up in people,” said Newman, who is also a practicing geriatrician at the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Health Care System.
Ketones, naturally occurring compounds, increase when the availability of dietary carbohydrates (sugars in various forms) are limited, forcing the body to use fat instead of sugar for energy. Various forms of fasting and the popular high-fat, moderate-protein, and low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet can put people into ketosis. Both have been linked to several health benefits, including weight loss, a reversal of metabolic syndrome and reduced inflammation. The supplement used in the trial is designed to put people into ketosis without having to change their diet.
The Buck’s BIKE trial was the pilot for TAKEOFF
The BIKE (Buck Institute Ketone Ester) pilot study was the first trial in the world to look at the effects of ketone ester supplementation in the context of aging. Thirty healthy individuals over the age of 65 have taken part in a 12-week double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study to begin to see whether benefits of ketone bodies in aging that have been observed in mice translate to human beings. The final participants in BIKE are expected to finish the protocol in late 2023; results of the study will be released in 2024.
While BIKE involves older adults in stable health, TAKEOFF will recruit adults who are pre-frail, based on their walking speed. A decrease in normal walking speed is one of the precursors of frailty and is associated with increased risk for a variety of geriatric problems. TAKEOFF co-investigator, Buck Lead Translational Scientist Brianna Stubbs, PhD, says TAKEOFF has a different primary outcome as well. “We will be looking at people’s muscle strength on a leg press over the course of the study. In BIKE we are primarily interested in safety and tolerance. While we’re still interested in those measures in TAKEOFF, we’re focused on leg press strength because strength is one of the key signs of frailty and we expect that ketosis may improve muscle strength by acting on energy and inflammation.”
Collaborators at Ohio State University, led by Jeff Volek, PhD, will be looking in detail at muscle function and metabolism among participants. Scientists at UConn Center for Aging, led by Jenna Bartley, PhD, will take a deep dive into immune responses with a particular interest in immunosenescence and chronic inflammation. The Buck will be looking closely at changes in various blood biomarkers of aging during the course of the trial.
“It’s crucial that we look at the impact of this intervention from several angles because there are so many possible applications of ketone biology for older adults,” said Newman. “If the science works in people, that’s direct evidence that we should be developing ketone-based interventions for other conditions of aging that share similar mechanisms like energy loss and chronic inflammation. This could involve everything from Alzheimer’s to heart disease.”
Recruitment for TAKEOFF will begin in 2024
Coordination between the three TAKEOFF clinical sites will be managed by the UCSF-affiliated San Francisco Coordinating Center, which specializes in conducting multi-site trials of older adults. The Coordinating Center will ensure standardization between the sites and assist with participant recruitment strategies. Outreach to local communities historically underrepresented in research will help ensure a diverse and nationally representative group of participants. The Buck will encourage outreach and recruitment of older adults with Hispanic backgrounds in Marin and Sonoma counties.
TAKEOFF is designed to help move translational research forward
TAKEOFF’s protocols and outcome measures are designed to be compatible with other trials involved with the Translational Geroscience Network, an NIH-funded collaboration of researchers testing clinical interventions that target fundamental mechanisms of aging to address aging-related problems as a group, instead of one at a time. Dr. Newman co-leads the sibling Geroscience Education and Training Network that is developing programs to train investigators to carry out such clinical trials.
The Network’s efforts to standardize outcome measurements was spurred by designing the TAME (Targeting Aging with Metformin) trial, which would aim to see whether taking the popular diabetes drug metformin can delay development of age-related chronic diseases in older adults without diabetes. “There is such an explosion of interest in testing interventions that could impact aging that it became obvious that we need to be able to compare apples-to-apples when it comes to trial results,” said Newman. “The design of TAME has inspired a constellation of smaller studies in both industry and academia testing a whole variety of interventions from metformin and rapamycin to senolytics. We really look forward to Buck becoming a key node in these efforts, helping to accelerate getting the biology of aging out of the laboratory and into the clinic.”
TAKEOFF and the Buck’s pledge to the public
If TAKEOFF is successful at proving that ketone supplementation impacts hallmarks of aging, both Newman and Stubbs predict there will be an uptick in efforts to get FDA-approved targeted interventions for specific diseases of aging based on ketone biology into the clinic. But they also acknowledge that ketone supplementation will continue to be of major interest to those interested in maintaining good health as they age.
“At the Buck we want to use evidence-based reasoning to inform the decisions that people make about what they’re going to do for their own health,” said Stubbs. “The supplement and diet industries can be muddy, with lots of questionable claims based sometimes on no data, and so, hopefully, the results of both BIKE and TAKEOFF will allow people to make wise decisions about what they’re going to do with their own diet and supplement kind of regimes. That’s a role we’re happy to play for the public.”
INFORMATION: Dr. John Newman, Principal Investigator for the TAKEOFF study, and Dr. Brianna Stubbs, a study co-investigator, own stock in BHB Therapeutics, LTD, the company providing the product being studied, and are inventors on patents that relate to the product being studied. The Buck Institute also has an ownership interest in BHB Therapeutics.
Acknowledgement: TAKEOFF is being funded by NIH grant R01AG081226
About the Buck Institute:
The Buck’s success will ultimately change healthcare. The Buck Institute for Research on Aging aims to end the threat of age-related diseases for this and future generations by bringing together the most capable and passionate scientists from a broad range of disciplines to identify and impede the ways in which we age. An independent, nonprofit institution, its goal is to increase human healthspan, or the healthy years of life. Globally recognized as the pioneer and leader in efforts to target aging, the number one risk factor for serious chronic diseases including Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, cancer, macular degeneration, atherosclerosis (heart attack and stroke), and type 2 diabetes, the Buck wants to help people live better longer. Learn more at: https://buckinstitute.org
END
$3.5 million NIH grant funds the first-ever clinical trial of ketone supplementation to treat and or prevent frailty
TAKEOFF is a multi-site clinical trial to determine if putting at-risk older adults into ketosis can stave off a key aspect of geriatric syndrome
2023-09-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Scientific ocean drilling discovers dynamic carbon cycling in the ultra-deep-water Japan Trench
2023-09-11
The Japan Trench is located on the “Pacific Ring of Fire”, a region of special interest in earthquake and deep-water research. “It is here that oceanic plates bend, form ultra-deep-water trenches and move below overriding plates in so-called subduction zones, while accumulating long-term global plate tectonic strain”, says Dr. Ken Ikehara from National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Japan, and co-chief scientist of IODP Expedition 386. “This energy is released cataclysmically during so-called megathrust earthquakes, ...
University of Houston researchers charting a sustainable course in oceanic carbon capture
2023-09-11
As researchers around the world race against time to develop new strategies and technologies to fight climate change, a team of scientists at the University of Houston is exploring one possible way to directly reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the environment: Negative emissions technologies (NETs).
Mim Rahimi, assistant professor of environmental engineering at UH’s Cullen College of Engineering is leading the development of an emerging NET called electrochemical direct ocean capture (eDOC), which helps the ocean cleanse itself of harmful carbon dioxide. The concept ...
Antidepressants may reduce negative memories while improving overall memory, according to Rice study
2023-09-11
New research from Rice University finds that antidepressants may actually reduce negative memories in individuals suffering from depression while improving overall memory function.
The study, “Perceived antidepressant efficacy associated with reduced negative and enhanced neutral mnemonic discrimination,” appears in the latest edition of Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. It examines how antidepressant use in depressed individuals affects memories, both good and bad.
Stephanie Leal, an assistant professor of psychological sciences at Rice, is the study’s lead author. She said the study’s main finding about the link between antidepressants ...
Hybrid catalyst produces critical fertilizer and cleans wastewater
2023-09-11
Agriculture relies on synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, which is made using energy- and carbon-intensive processes and creates nitrate-containing runoff. Researchers have long sought solutions to reduce emissions from the industry that accounts for 3% of energy consumption each year.
A collaboration between two labs at Northwestern University, partnering with the University of Toronto, has found that producing the fertilizer urea using electrified synthesis could both denitrify wastewater while enabling low-carbon-intensity urea production. The process, which includes converting carbon ...
UNIST signs cooperation MoU with Eswatini Medical Christian University
2023-09-11
UNIST has taken a significant step towards combating women’s cancer on the African continent by signing an MOU with Eswatini Medical Christian University (EMCU) on June 28, 2023. The primary purpose of this partnership is to enhance cooperation in the diagnosis and treatment of cervical cancer, marking the beginning of a promising initiative.
Under this agreement, UNIST will lead research and development efforts in cervical cancer diagnosis and treatment technologies, while EMCU will provide a clinical test bed for these advancements.
The ...
OSE Immunotherapeutics announces: positive phase 3 data from its cancer vaccine in lung cancer patients with resistance to previous immunotherapy published in Annals of Oncology
2023-09-11
Nantes, France – September 11, 2023, 6:00pm CET – OSE Immunotherapeutics SA (ISIN: FR0012127173; Mnemo: OSE) today announced the peer-reviewed publication in Annals of Oncology* of the randomized Phase 3 clinical trial (Atalante-1) on T-cell epitope cancer vaccine Tedopi® in HLA-A2 positive patients with advanced or metastatic NSCLC in monotherapy in third line NSCLC with secondary resistance to immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICI).
Tedopi® is a novel T-cell epitope-based cancer vaccine targeting five tumor-associated antigens, ...
Chaplin receives funding for study integrating neural and momentary assessment of parenting, arousal and adolescent substance use
2023-09-11
Tara Chaplin, Associate Professor, Clinical Psychology, received $500,664 from the National Institutes of Health for an Independent Scientist Career Award titled: "Integrating neural and momentary assessment of parenting, arousal, and adolescent substance use."
This Independent Scientist K02 Award will provide Dr. Chaplin with cutting edge advanced training to enhance her career and transform her program of research. Through this training, Dr. Chaplin will integrate ecological momentary assessment (EMA) science into her expertise in developmental neuroscience to understand from a neural and momentary level parenting, emotion, and substance use associations ...
Smith receives funding for watershed programs
2023-09-11
Cynthia Smith, Associate Professor and K12 Education Director, Potomac Environmental Research and Education Center (PEREC), Environmental Science and Policy, received $60,750 from Fairfax County Public Schools for: "FCPS Watershed Programs." This funding began in July 2023 and will end in late June 2024. Since 2010, Smith has worked closely with the FCPS science office to deliver outdoor, hands-on field investigations to 5,200 seventh graders annually. Over 350 Mason students have worked as PEREC field interpreters, honing ...
Moran and Yao to study interpretability for neural language models of source code
2023-09-11
Kevin Moran, Assistant Professor, Computer Science, and Ziyu Yao, Assistant Professor, Computer Science, are set to receive funding from the National Science Foundation for: "Collaborative Research: SHF: Medium: Toward Understandability and Interpretability for Neural Language Models of Source Code."
Moran and Yao will develop a framework and methodology that enables researchers who build AI-powered developer tools and software engineers who use these tools to interpret why the underlying models make the predictions they do.
Their objective is to allow researchers to obtain detailed insights into why a model may not ...
How is ceviche ‘cooked?’ (video)
2023-09-11
WASHINGTON, Sept. 11, 2023 — What does it mean to have “cooked” something? Is heat the only way to break down proteins and transform raw ingredients? If you love ceviche, you know that’s not true … but how exactly does ceviche get “cooked?” No heat source is used, but it still undergoes a process in which proteins are denatured. We’re taking a closer look at proteins, how they denature and what that means for the food on your plate. https://youtu.be/Pw6apr3TBzY?si=RdIYP5j3B0daGtxw
Reactions ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
New guidelines for managing blood cancers in pregnancy
New study suggests RNA present on surfaces of leaves may shape microbial communities
U.S. suffers from low social mobility. Is sprawl partly to blame?
Research spotlight: Improving predictions about brain cancer outcomes with the right imaging criteria
New UVA professor’s research may boost next-generation space rockets
Multilingualism improves crucial cognitive functions in autistic children
The carbon in our bodies probably left the galaxy and came back on cosmic ‘conveyer belt’
Scientists unveil surprising human vs mouse differences in a major cancer immunotherapy target
NASA’s LEXI will provide X-ray vision of Earth’s magnetosphere
A successful catalyst design for advanced zinc-iodine batteries
AMS Science Preview: Tall hurricanes, snow and wildfire
Study finds 25% of youth experienced homelessness in Denver in 2021, significantly higher than known counts
Integrated spin-wave quantum memory
Brain study challenges long-held views about Parkinson's movement disorders
Mental disorders among offspring prenatally exposed to systemic glucocorticoids
Trends in screening for social risk in physician practices
Exposure to school racial segregation and late-life cognitive outcomes
AI system helps doctors identify patients at risk for suicide
Advanced imaging uncovers hidden metastases in high-risk prostate cancer cases
Study reveals oldest-known evolutionary “arms race”
People find medical test results hard to understand, increasing overall worry
Mizzou researchers aim to reduce avoidable hospitalizations for nursing home residents with dementia
National Diabetes Prevention Program saves costs for enrollees
Research team to study critical aspects of Alzheimer’s and dementia healthcare delivery
Major breakthrough for ‘smart cell’ design
From CO2 to acetaldehyde: Towards greener industrial chemistry
Unlocking proteostasis: A new frontier in the fight against neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's
New nanocrystal material a key step toward faster, more energy-efficient computing
One of the world’s largest social programs greatly reduced tuberculosis among the most vulnerable
Surprising ‘two-faced’ cancer gene role supports paradigm shift in predicting disease
[Press-News.org] $3.5 million NIH grant funds the first-ever clinical trial of ketone supplementation to treat and or prevent frailtyTAKEOFF is a multi-site clinical trial to determine if putting at-risk older adults into ketosis can stave off a key aspect of geriatric syndrome