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Acute effect of a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) on mood, anxiety and cognition in UK adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression: the MediMood randomised controlled trial protocol

Acute effect of a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) on mood, anxiety and cognition in UK adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression: the MediMood randomised controlled trial protocol
Acute effect of a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) on mood, anxiety and cognition in UK adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression: the MediMood randomised controlled trial protocol

INTRODUCTION: Psychological disorders including depression and anxiety are significant public health concerns. A Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) has been associated with improved mental well-being in observational studies. Evidence of the acute (defined as postprandial to 1 week) effects of an MDP on brain function, mood, cognition and important modulators, including sleep and the gut microbiota is limited. The current intervention aims to examine whether an MDP, compared with a Western diet (WD), improves mood, cognition and anxiety symptoms, postprandially, at 24-hour and after 5 days in adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Twenty-five UK adults (aged 18 or over) with mild to moderate anxiety and/or depression and low adherence to an MDP were recruited to a cross-over randomised controlled trial. Each participant undergoes a 5 day MDP and a 5 day WD in a randomised order with all meals provided. The co-primary outcomes are mood and anxiety, with secondary outcomes including cognitive function, brain perfusion (as assessed by MRI), sleep quality, blood pressure, plasma glucose, insulin, lipids, C-reactive protein, cortisol, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, gut microbiota speciation and microbial metabolites including short chain fatty acids. A linear mixed model and/or paired analysis will be used to compare the effects of treatments over time.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has received a favourable ethics opinion from the National Health Service London Queen Square Research Ethics Committee (22/LO/0796). The results will be disseminated through scientific journals and conferences.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05927376.

Humans, Diet, Mediterranean, Cognition, Anxiety/diet therapy, United Kingdom, Affect, Adult, Depression/diet therapy, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Male, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Diet, Western, Middle Aged, Young Adult
2044-6055
e082935
Esgunoglu, Latife
003049e6-e7ff-4b1c-aeff-10ef099d71b3
Liaquat, Marrium
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Gillings, Rachel
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Lazar, Alpar
a5ac174c-dcd0-49a1-929f-90b5fe9295b5
Leddy, Adrian
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Brooks, Jon
7dcbed77-f3b1-441f-a7e4-0fdaca64bdad
Penny, William
bd57b8b9-8668-42ad-be54-4166defb8d41
Sami, Saber
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Hornberger, M
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Stevenson, Emma
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Jennings, Amy
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Minihane, Anne Marie
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Esgunoglu, Latife
003049e6-e7ff-4b1c-aeff-10ef099d71b3
Liaquat, Marrium
507d0349-d2ce-4758-a50f-a00b862a9fa6
Gillings, Rachel
3da2a5e2-91f6-48e7-90a7-b53132045a9d
Lazar, Alpar
a5ac174c-dcd0-49a1-929f-90b5fe9295b5
Leddy, Adrian
2fe706da-4567-4773-a16e-7649f0250779
Brooks, Jon
7dcbed77-f3b1-441f-a7e4-0fdaca64bdad
Penny, William
bd57b8b9-8668-42ad-be54-4166defb8d41
Sami, Saber
e4536380-a4bf-46cd-bd45-6d44535fe8d9
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Stevenson, Emma
f80d54db-850f-4724-b68b-2a4a70178e58
Jennings, Amy
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Minihane, Anne Marie
e948b1ec-a626-45d1-9e4b-3f667825a4d8

Esgunoglu, Latife, Liaquat, Marrium, Gillings, Rachel, Lazar, Alpar, Leddy, Adrian, Brooks, Jon, Penny, William, Sami, Saber, Hornberger, M, Stevenson, Emma, Jennings, Amy and Minihane, Anne Marie (2024) Acute effect of a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) on mood, anxiety and cognition in UK adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression: the MediMood randomised controlled trial protocol. BMJ Open, 14 (12), e082935. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-082935).

Record type: Article

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Psychological disorders including depression and anxiety are significant public health concerns. A Mediterranean-style dietary pattern (MDP) has been associated with improved mental well-being in observational studies. Evidence of the acute (defined as postprandial to 1 week) effects of an MDP on brain function, mood, cognition and important modulators, including sleep and the gut microbiota is limited. The current intervention aims to examine whether an MDP, compared with a Western diet (WD), improves mood, cognition and anxiety symptoms, postprandially, at 24-hour and after 5 days in adults with mild to moderate anxiety and depression.

METHODS AND ANALYSIS: Twenty-five UK adults (aged 18 or over) with mild to moderate anxiety and/or depression and low adherence to an MDP were recruited to a cross-over randomised controlled trial. Each participant undergoes a 5 day MDP and a 5 day WD in a randomised order with all meals provided. The co-primary outcomes are mood and anxiety, with secondary outcomes including cognitive function, brain perfusion (as assessed by MRI), sleep quality, blood pressure, plasma glucose, insulin, lipids, C-reactive protein, cortisol, brain-derived neurotrophic factor, gut microbiota speciation and microbial metabolites including short chain fatty acids. A linear mixed model and/or paired analysis will be used to compare the effects of treatments over time.

ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study has received a favourable ethics opinion from the National Health Service London Queen Square Research Ethics Committee (22/LO/0796). The results will be disseminated through scientific journals and conferences.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05927376.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 November 2024
Published date: 20 December 2024
Additional Information: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ Group.
Keywords: Humans, Diet, Mediterranean, Cognition, Anxiety/diet therapy, United Kingdom, Affect, Adult, Depression/diet therapy, Cross-Over Studies, Female, Male, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Diet, Western, Middle Aged, Young Adult

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505354
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505354
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 7ada315e-f0e7-400d-ba2c-8074f3688b35
ORCID for M Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 16:43
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 02:17

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Contributors

Author: Latife Esgunoglu
Author: Marrium Liaquat
Author: Rachel Gillings
Author: Alpar Lazar
Author: Adrian Leddy
Author: Jon Brooks
Author: William Penny
Author: Saber Sami
Author: M Hornberger ORCID iD
Author: Emma Stevenson
Author: Amy Jennings
Author: Anne Marie Minihane

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