Metabolic and Orexin-A Responses to Ketogenic Diet and Intermittent Fasting: A 12-Month Randomized Trial in Adults with Obesity
Antonietta Monda, Maria Casillo, Salvatore Allocca, Fiorenzo Moscatelli, Marco La Marra, Vincenzo Monda, Girolamo Di Maio, Paride Vasco, Marcellino Monda, Rita Polito, Giovanni Messina, Antonietta Messina

TL;DR
This study compared the long-term effects of three diets on weight loss and metabolic health in obese adults, finding that a ketogenic diet led to the most sustained improvements.
Contribution
The study provides novel insights into the long-term neuroendocrine and metabolic effects of different dietary strategies in obesity.
Findings
The ketogenic diet produced the largest sustained reductions in BMI, fat mass, fasting glucose, and total cholesterol over 12 months.
TRF16:8 showed the most consistent longitudinal increase in Orexin-A levels and faster early metabolic improvements.
Orexin-A increases were associated with improved metabolic flexibility and reduced inflammation across all groups.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Intermittent fasting and ketogenic dietary approaches are increasingly investigated for their potential metabolic benefits in obesity. However, their long-term neuroendocrine effects—particularly those involving Orexin-A, a peptide implicated in energy regulation—remain poorly understood. The objective of this study was to compare the long-term metabolic, inflammatory, and orexinergic responses to different dietary strategies in adults with obesity. Methods: In this 12-month randomized, three-arm trial, 30 adults with obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to a hypocaloric ketogenic diet (KD), a 16:8 time-restricted eating regimen (TRF16:8), or a 5:2 intermittent fasting protocol (ADF5:2). Anthropometric parameters, body composition, fasting glucose, lipid profile, inflammatory cytokines (CRP, IL-6, TNF-α, IL-10), and plasma Orexin-A levels were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDietary Effects on Health · Diet and metabolism studies · Regulation of Appetite and Obesity
