On 2016 Jun 07, Kevin Hall commented:
This interesting randomized controlled trial by Dr. David Ludwig’s group has been widely recognized as demonstrating a substantial metabolic advantage of carbohydrate restriction following a period of weight loss. The reported differences in total energy expenditure (TEE) amounted to as much as 325 kcal/d between isocaloric diets. However, in addition to the confounding differences in protein between the diets, there are several reasons to be skeptical about this conclusion. In particular, the data from this study are internally inconsistent at a fundamental level suggesting that some of the measurements were simply erroneous.
Following a run-in period of weight loss, subjects consumed three “weight-loss maintenance” diets in a randomized crossover fashion with each diet lasting one month. The very low carbohydrate (VLC) diet had ~50% more protein than both the low glycemic index (LGI) diet and the low fat (LF) diet, but energy intake was claimed to be held constant at ~2600 kcal/d. However, the measured TEE was between ~200-500 kcal/d greater than the reported energy intake for all diets. Therefore, the corresponding negative energy balance should have resulted in several kilograms of weight loss over the three month period consuming these diets. However, no such weight loss occurred since the mean body weight at the end of the run-in weight loss phase (105.0 kg minus 14.3 kg of lost weight = 90.7 kg) was slightly lower than the reported body weights during the different diets (91.5 kg for the LF diet; 91.1 kg for the LGI diet; and 91.2 kg for the VLC diet) which were not significantly different from each other.
What could be responsible for these inconsistencies in the data? It is highly likely that the energy intake measurements were inaccurate since diet adherence during outpatient feeding studies is typically poor even when all study foods are provided. If the energy intake measurements were consistently biased (such that energy intake was underestimated equally for all three diets) then the relative constancy of body weight suggests that TEE during the isocaloric VLC diet could not have been ~300 kcal/d greater than the LF diet. Such a difference in energy balance should have led to a cumulative difference in stored energy amounting to ~9000 kilocalories which translates to more than 1 kg of weight difference between the diets over the one month diet period. Since this weight difference was not observed, the inescapable conclusion is that the body weight, energy intake, and TEE data from this study are internally inconsistent and at least one of these measurements is fundamentally in error.
Since the body weight data are likely correct, either the subjects were eating ~300 kcal/d more during the VLC diet as compared to the LF diet (in which case the study was poorly controlled) or the TEE data were simply erroneous. The latter explanation is quite likely since the observed differences in TEE between the diets may have been statistical anomalies. In particular, the reported statistical analyses did not adequately address the multiple comparisons problem for this secondary study outcome which was one of 25 listed in the registration of this clinical trial. Therefore, the chance of obtaining a false positive for any one of these 25 secondary outcomes was quite high. Previous studies investigating the effects of isocaloric diets on energy expenditure have not seen such large effects, thereby adding further support to the conclusion that the TEE differences reported in this study were unlikely to be real.
Interestingly, the primary endpoint of this study was resting energy expenditure (REE) and the high protein VLC diet was the only diet showing a statistically significant difference compared to the LF diet. However, the magnitude of the REE effect was only ~67 kcal/d and was therefore clinically insignificant. The moderate carbohydrate, LGI diet with protein and calories matched to the LF diet failed to show a statistically significant difference in either REE or TEE despite a 34% decrease in carbohydrate compared to the LF diet. In other words, when comparing diets differing in protein, the primary REE outcome of the study showed a small effect that has been largely ignored and the secondary TEE outcome showed a large effect that was likely to be a false positive.
In conclusion, this study suffered from the same pitfalls that are typical of outpatient studies where poor diet adherence is the norm. Furthermore, the measurements were internally inconsistent and the reported beneficial effects of carbohydrate restriction on energy expenditure are likely to be incorrect.
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