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A four-week dietary intervention with mycoprotein-containing food products reduces serum cholesterol concentrations in community-dwelling, overweight adults: A randomised controlled trial

George F. Pavis, Raquel Revuelta Iniesta, Holly Roper, Hannah Theobald, Emma Derbyshire, Tim J. A. Finnigan, Francis B. Stephens, Benjamin T. Wall

2024Clinical Nutrition17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Substituting dietary meat and fish for mycoprotein, a fungal-derived food source rich in protein and fibre, decreases circulating cholesterol concentrations in laboratory-controlled studies. However, whether these findings can be translated to a home-based setting, and to decrease cholesterol concentrations in overweight and hypercholesterolemic individuals, remains to be established. OBJECTIVE: ) adults. METHODS: ; 13 males, 20 females) for 4 weeks. Fingertip blood samples were collected and sent via postal service before and after the dietary intervention period and analysed for concentrations of serum lipids, blood glucose and c-peptide. RESULTS: ) concentrations (P < 0.05) vs. CON. CONCLUSIONS: We show that a home-based dietary intervention of mycoprotein-containing food products effectively lowers circulating cholesterol concentrations in overweight, hypercholesterolemic adults. This demonstrates that mycoprotein consumption is a feasible and ecologically valid dietary strategy to improve markers of cardio-metabolic health in an at-risk population under free living conditions. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT04773483 (https://classic. CLINICALTRIALS: gov/ct2/show/NCT04773483).

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOverweightIntervention (counseling)Randomized controlled trialFood scienceInternal medicineObesityNursingChemistryAgriculture Sustainability and Environmental ImpactNutritional Studies and DietGut microbiota and health