Press Release: Favorable Metabolic Changes and Reduced Chronic Disease Risk Linked to Ramadan Fasting

Posted on February 05, 2024 by Admin

Researchers carried out a metabolomics investigation to elucidate the impacts of Ramadan fasting on health and metabolism. Their study group comprised 72 participants who provided blood shortly before and after Ramadan fasting, based on which researchers generated metabolic scores. Study findings, obtained by comparing participants' metabolic scores against those maintained by the UK Biobank, reveal that Ramadan fasting significantly reduced the risks of lung, colorectal, and breast cancers.

Study

In the present study, researchers recorded the metabolomics alterations following Ramadan fasting. Their study cohort was the London Ramadan Study (LORANS), an observational cohort comprising 140 Muslims who observe the Ramadan fast. Study data collection included demographic data, medical records, and two blood samples provided a few days before and a few days following initiation of the fast. Additionally, blood pressure and body composition were recorded during routine blood collection.

Study inclusion criteria comprised age (above 18 years), intended duration of fast (20 days or more), and completed data records. Pregnant women were excluded from the study. Following exclusions due to unmet criteria requirements, 72 participants were included for data analyses, all providing written informed consent to participate in the study.

Blood samples were processed to separate and isolate the plasma, which in turn was subjected to high-throughput Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy using the Nightingale platform. The Nightingale platform was chosen due to its ability to identify and quantify 169 lipids and metabolites. It was also selected because the United Kingdom's (UK) Biobank dataset includes Nightingale platform readings. The UK Biobank is a country-wide large-cohort prospective study comprising 500,000 English citizens representative of the nation.

Linear mixed-effects models were used to compare NMR readings from blood samples provided before and after fasting, allowing a one-to-one comparison of the metabolite changes arising as outcomes of the fasting process. Additionally, UK Biobank Nightingale platform metabolite readings were used to compute metabolic risk scores for common chronic diseases, including cancers and cardiometabolic disorders. These values were then applied to NMR readings from this study to measure the relative change in chronic disease risk as a consequence of Ramadan (and, by extension, intermittent) fasting.

Results

Demographic analyses revealed that the mean age of the 72-strong study cohort was 45.7 years, 48.6% (n = 35) of whom were male. Body assessments during blood collection visits showed that, on average, participants lost 1.7 kg and 1.1% of their body fat in the two to three weeks between measurements. Nightingale platform analyses show that of the 169 measured metabolites, 14 were observed to change significantly when comparing blood collections.

For establishing the metabolic risk scores, baseline characteristics of 117,981 UK Biobank participants were used to establish seven scores, including diabetes (using 46 metabolites), coronary heart disease (16), hypertension (25), renal failure (12), lung cancer (nine), colorectal cancer (two), and breast cancer (one). Applying these scores to present study participants reveals that the relative risk of lung, colorectal, and breast cancers decreased by 9.6%, 2.4%, and 1.1%, respectively. In contrast, the other measured outcomes observed no changes in metabolic risk scores.

Conclusion

The present study uses Ramadan fasting as a natural experiment to investigate the effects of time-restricted fasting on people's health and chronic illness risk. It used cutting-edge, high-throughput NRM spectroscopy via the Nightingale platform to compute chronic disease metabolite risk scores.

When applied to the 72 included study participants, the metabolic risk scores highlight the beneficial role of Ramadan fasting in reducing the risk of certain cancers such as lung (-9.6%), colorectal (-2.4%), and breast (-1.1%), while having no measurable effects on cardiovascular disease risk.

Source:

https://www.news-medical.net/news/20240204/Ramadan-fasting-linked-to-favorable-metabolic-changes-and-reduced-chronic-disease-risk.aspx