Prevention of NAFLD in Hispanic Children
Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease focused on measuring Latino Children, Pre-puberal, Low Free sugar diet (LFSD)
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- At least one parent or the child self-identifies as Hispanic or Latino.
- BMI ≥ 85th percentile for age and sex.
- Age ≥ 6 years and ≤ 9 years
- Tanner stage 1 by self and/or parental report
- Normal ALT on screening labs (≤23 IU for girls, ≤26 IU for boys)
- Written informed consent from parent or legal guardian, assent from child
Exclusion Criteria:
- Known diagnosis of chronic liver disease other than NAFLD and "fatty liver"
- History of significant depression
- Implanted metal or other implant (braces ok), or claustrophobia or other reason that contraindicates MRI
- Type 2 diabetes (Hemoglobin A1c > 6.4% on screening labs or chronic diagnosis)
- Plans to move within the next 12 months
- Current or previous participation in a weight loss program or obesity treatment program or clinic
- Cancer or history of cancer
- Recipient of a liver transplant
- Chronic use (in the last year) of medications known to cause NAFLD or fatty liver (TPN, amiodarone, chronic oral steroids, etc.)
- Intellectual disability or major psychiatric disorder limiting informed assent
- At risk for eating disorder by screening instrument
- Participants who are currently enrolled in a clinical trial or have received an investigational product within the last 60 days
- Participants who are not able or willing to comply with the diet protocol or have any other condition or circumstance that would impede compliance or hinder completion of the study in the opinion of the investigator
- Children who spend more than 1 night per week consistently in another household
Sites / Locations
- Emory UniversityRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
Low Free Sugar Diet (LFSD) Intervention
Usual Care Control
The 1-year dietary intervention will be accomplished by adapting and extending a Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) guided low sugar intervention. SCT is a framework that helps explain how people regulate their behavior through control and reinforcement to achieve goal-directed behavior that can be maintained over time.
Usual Care (Control group): Parents of enrolled children in the usual care group will be provided printed material on healthy family lifestyle at the beginning of the study. The control group will complete all of the same research visits and assessments as the intervention group.