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A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Ketogenic Metabolic Therapy in Schizophrenia, Bipolar Disorder, Major Depressive Disorder: Deep Omic Profiling
The goal of this randomized clinical trial is to be adequately powered to evaluate the effect of ketogenic metabolic therapy on the quality of life in serious mental illness, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder.
The ketogenic diet is a low carbohydrate, moderate protein, higher fat diet to help individuals improve energy and mood and to obtain nutrients from fats and protein. Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and major depressive disorder, collectively affect about 344 million individuals worldwide, (24 million with schizophrenia, 40 million people with BD, and 280 million with depression World Health Organization). These illnesses are debilitating psychiatric conditions characterized by a chronic pattern of emotional, behavioral, and cognitive disturbances. Shared psychopathology includes the pre-eminence of altered affective states, disorders of thoughts, and behavioral control. Additionally, those conditions share epidemiological traits, including significant cardiovascular, metabolic, infectious, and respiratory comorbidities, resulting in reduced life expectancy of up to 25 years (Xie et al., 2023). Reductions in cerebral glucose uptake are seen in both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. While glucose is the brain's default fuel, ketone bodies are 27% more efficient, improve brain metabolism, and promote neural stability, as seen in childhood epilepsy (Sethi \& Ford, 2022). The ketogenic diet (KD, also known as metabolic therapy) has been successful in the treatment of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and epilepsy (Sethi et al., 2024, Liu et al., 2018, Martin-McGill et al., 2020). Nutritional ketosis has been successfully used to treat a range of neurological disorders. Metabolic disorders, which include conditions such as obesity and metabolic syndrome, more commonly occur in individuals with severe mental illness (between 40-60%). The investigators aim to study the effect of ketogenic metabolic therapy on various markers including: * Metabolic health measurements and cardiovascular risk factors including: insulin resistance, advanced lipid analysis, weight, glucose regulation, dyslipidemia, absolute body fat chang, inflammation, waist circumference, blood pressure, skeletal muscle mass, and omega index * Psychiatric symptom measures include: mood, psychosis, cognition, and quality of life * Deep omic profiling including metabolic and proteomic data. Through identifying patterns, changes, and pathways of molecular, psychiatric, physiologic, and metabolic markers, the investigators aim to assess how this intervention may impact individuals with serious mental illnesses and symptoms/conditions related to serious mental illnesses.
Age
18 - 80 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Stanford University
Palo Alto, California, United States
Start Date
July 1, 2025
Primary Completion Date
July 1, 2028
Completion Date
July 1, 2028
Last Updated
May 16, 2025
120
ESTIMATED participants
LCHF Ketogenic Diet
OTHER
Diet-as-Usual (DAU)
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Stanford University
NCT07455929
NCT06740383
Data Source & Attribution
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