A ketogenic drink improves cognition in mild cognitive impairment: Results of a 6‐month RCT
Mélanie Fortier, Christian‐Alexandre Castellano, Valérie St‐Pierre, Étienne Myette‐Côté, Francis Langlois, Maggie Roy, Marie‐Christine Morin, Christian Bocti, Tamàs Fülöp, Jean‐Philippe Godin, Carla Delannoy, Bernard Cuenoud, Stephen C. Cunnane
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Counteracting impaired brain glucose metabolism with ketones may improve cognition in mild cognitive impairment (MCI). METHODS: Cognition, plasma ketone response, and metabolic profile were assessed before and 6 months after supplementation with a ketogenic drink containing medium chain triglyceride (ketogenic medium chain triglyceride [kMCT]; 15 g twice/day; n = 39) or placebo (n = 44). RESULTS: Free and cued recall (Trial 1; P = .047), verbal fluency (categories; P = .024), Boston Naming Test (total correct answers; P = .033), and the Trail-Making Test (total errors; P = .017) improved significantly in the kMCT group compared to placebo (analysis of covariance; pre-intervention score, sex, age, education, and apolipoprotein E4 as covariates). Some cognitive outcomes also correlated positively with plasma ketones. Plasma metabolic profile and ketone response were unchanged. CONCLUSIONS: This kMCT drink improved cognitive outcomes in MCI, at least in part by increasing blood ketone level. These data support further assessment of MCI progression to Alzheimer's disease.