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The Effects of Various Cooking Oils on Health Related Biomarkers in Healthy Subjects

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02599103
Enrollment
17
Registered
2015-11-06
Start date
2013-09-30
Completion date
2015-09-30
Last updated
2015-11-06

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Colorectal Neoplasms

Brief summary

Fats and oils play important roles in maintaining human nutrition and health through providing energy, essential fatty acids, and acting as modulators of many biological processes (signal transduction, immunity and inflammation). Due to differences in the fatty acid composition and content of antioxidants of individual cooking oils, the degree of oxidative and thermolytic reactions may vary oil by oil. It is lack of human feeding study to investigate the molecular mechanisms on how and which deep-fried oil exerts its adverse effects. The investigators are also lack of biomarkers for monitoring deep-fried oil exposure. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to compare how human body responds differently to several popular uncooked and deep-fried oils with varied fatty acid compositions with respect of oxylipin profile, inflammatory markers, non-targeted metabolomics, and transcriptomics. The investigators will recruit 20 volunteers, provided them once a week the milk shakes prepared from 60g of olive oil, soybean oil, palm oil, camellia oil, tallow (butter), and deep-fried oils of the last 4, respectively; in comparison with a no-fat milk shake control. The experiments lasted for 10 weeks.。Each time; serum, plasma, whole blood and urine samples were collected at baseline, after 2 hours, and after 4 hours. The investigators anticipate to find biomarker(s) for deep-frying, and contribute to the understanding of molecular mechanisms on how deep-fried oils exert adverse effects toward health through integrative omics or so-called system biology approaches.

Interventions

OTHERFat-free milkshake

participants drinks a fat-free milk shakes

OTHEROlive oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of olive oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of soybean oil

OTHERFried soybean oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of fried soybean oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of palm oil

OTHERFried palm oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of fried palm oil

OTHERCamellia oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of camellia oil

OTHERFried camellia oil

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of fried camellia oil

OTHERTallow

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of tallow

OTHERFried tallow

participants drinks the milk shakes prepared from 60g of fried tallow

Sponsors

Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Caregiver)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
MALE
Age
20 Years to 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Non-smoking, non-drinker, usual dietary intake * BMI : 18.5\ 27 kg/m2

Exclusion criteria

1. Over the past two weeks have suffered from acute illness. 2. None of the subjects was taking any supplemental vitamins, antioxidants or medication at that time. 3. Taking steroids or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, such as Aspirin or Panadol in the past one week. 4. Cancer or other severe diseases was diagnosed.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
The changs of metabolomics profile between before and after oil consumptionbaseline to 2 hours and 4 hours after oil consumptionThis is a metabolomics study. We measured retention time (min), mass and abundance of serum metabolites with LC-QTOF at 3 time points. Then, we compared the abundance of metabolites between different oil consumption time ( before and after ) and assessed the health effects of cooking oils.

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026