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Investigation of Cinnamon Spice on Glucose Tolerance in Subjects With Pre-diabetes

Effects of Cinnamon Spice on Glucose, Insulin, GI Hormone and Microbiome in Obese Individuals With Pre-Diabetes

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04342624
Acronym
CINNII
Enrollment
20
Registered
2020-04-13
Start date
2021-04-14
Completion date
2023-01-01
Last updated
2023-05-06

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

Conditions

PreDiabetes, Blood Glucose, High

Keywords

glucose, cinnamon, pre-diabetes, microbiome

Brief summary

This study aims to determine whether the effectiveness of cinnamon spice capsules vs. placebo capsules on glucose tolerance in prediabetic subjects who are overweight or obese.

Detailed description

Participants will be asked to take cinnamon spice or placebo capsules daily with breakfast and dinner (2 weeks of cinnamon, 2 weeks of placebo). The placebo capsule is a study product that looks like the cinnamon capsules, but contains no active ingredients. The amount of cinnamon will be 4 grams per day. 2 grams will be taken at breakfast and dinner. Timed blood collections over a three-hour period will be used to measure how cinnamon spice affects glucose metabolism/insulin sensitivity in human subjects. Everyone who participates in the study will receive each treatment in random order. In this way, everyone will receive cinnamon spice capsules and placebo. In a crossover study design subjects will consume either cinnamon or placebo with foods and before bed for 28 days. The placebo capsule is a study product that looks like the cinnamon capsules, but contains no active ingredients. The participants will also be asked to undergo an oral glucose tolerance test 4 times (on separate days) before and after the first and second cinnamon/placebo consumption. Subjects will take 3 capsules of cinnamon or placebo (total 2 g) with the glucose drink (75 g). Timed blood collections over a three-hour period will be used to measure how cinnamon spice affects glucose metabolism/insulin sensitivity in human subject. Continuous glucose monitoring will performed through the entire study for each subject. The microbiome will also be examined at the beginning and end of each 28 day phase (0-4 weeks and 6-10weeks). Subjects will consume a brown-beige diet during the study to exclude the effects of other polyphenol-rich foods. We will enroll twenty subjects \>= 20 years of age, overweight/obese (BMI 25 to 35 kg/ m2) with fasting blood sugar between 100 and 126 mg/dl or HbA1c \>=5.7% and \<= 6.5%.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTCinnamon

Cinnamon supplement

OTHERPlacebo

Placebo

Sponsors

University of California, Los Angeles
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
OTHER
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
20 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Healthy human adults age \>=20 years' old * Typically consume low fiber/polyphenol diet (beige diet see below) * Overweight/obese individuals with a BMI of 25 to 40 kg/m2 and HbA1c \>=5.6% and \<= 6.5%. * Subjects must read and sign the Institutional Review Board-approved written informed consent prior to the initiation of any study specific procedures or enrollment. A subject will be excluded for any condition that might compromise the ability to give truly informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

* Any subjects with cinnamon intolerance * Any subject with a screening laboratory value outside of the laboratory normal range that is considered clinically significant for study participation by the investigator. * Any subject currently taking blood thinning medications such as Warfarin or Coumadin * Any history of gastrointestinal disease or surgery except for appendectomy or cholecystectomy. * Eating a high fiber/polyphenol diet or taking any medication or dietary supplement, which interfere with the absorption of polyphenols. * History of gastrointestinal surgery, diabetes mellitus on medications, or other serious medical condition, such as chronic hepatic or renal disease, bleeding disorder, congestive heart disease, chronic diarrhea disorders, myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass graft, angioplasty within 6 months prior to screening, current diagnosis of uncontrolled hypertension (defined as systolic BP \>160mmHg, diastolic BP \>95mmHg), active or chronic gastrointestinal disorders, bulimia, anorexia, laxative abuse, or endocrine diseases (except thyroid disease requiring medication) as indicated by medical history. * Pregnant or breastfeeding * Currently uses tobacco products. * Currently has an alcohol intake \>= 20 g ⁄ day; * Currently has a coffee intake \>= 3 cups ⁄ day; * Allergy or sensitivity to cinnamon. Subjects will be excluded if there is a prior history of such sensitivity. Since these foods are commonly eaten and allergies are rare, subjects should be aware of this sensitivity prior to entering the study. To determine this, a positive history of cinnamon ingestion without incident will be requested. In addition, any subject with a history of allergy or anaphylaxis of any kind will be excluded * Is unable or unwilling to comply with the study protocol.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Blood glucose control using glucose tolerance test3 hoursTo determine the effect of cinnamon on glucose tolerance acutely after 75g glucose intake in pre-diabetic overweight/obese individuals
Blood glucose control with continuous glucose monitoring.4 weeksTo determine the effect of cinnamon on glucose tolerance for 4 weeks in pre-diabetic overweight/obese individuals
Mircobiome effects of cinnamon through stool sample collection4 weeksTo determine the effects of cinnamon on gut microbiota, short chain fatty acids, gut hormones GLP-1, GIP,glucagon and metabolomics.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 7, 2026