Intermittent Fasting to Improve Insulin Secretion (IFIS)
Sponsor: Charite University, Berlin, Germany
Listed as NCT04607096, this observational or N/A phase trial focuses on Diabetes type2 and Insulin Secretion and remains actively recruiting participants. Sponsored by Charite University, Berlin, Germany, it has been updated 11 times since 2021, reflecting substantial change activity. This study adds to the evidence base for this therapeutic area through structured, versioned documentation.
Status Flow
Change History
11 versions recorded-
Apr 21, 2026 — Present [daily]
Recruiting
Phase: NA → None
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Sep 2025 — Apr 2026 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Sep 2024 — Sep 2025 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Jul 2024 — Sep 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Jun 2024 — Jul 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
Status: Unknown Status → Recruiting
▶ Show 6 earlier versions
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Jan 2024 — Jun 2024 [monthly]
Unknown Status NA
Status: Recruiting → Unknown Status
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Jan 2022 — Jan 2024 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Sep 2021 — Jan 2022 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
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Jun 2021 — Sep 2021 [monthly]
Recruiting NA
Status: Not Yet Recruiting → Recruiting
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Jan 2021 — Jun 2021 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting NA
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Nov 2020 — Jan 2021 [monthly]
Not Yet Recruiting NA
First recorded
Eligibility Summary
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) mellitus is a challenge for health care systems as the numbers increases constantly. In 2014, 422 million people had been living with diabetes worldwide. The absolute numbers of people with prediabetes have also grown substantially over 25 years worldwide. In Germany, about 10% of the population has T2D and another 21 % of the population has prediabetes.Overall, 16% of all deaths in Germany are attributable to type 2 diabetes. Macro- and microvascular complications of diabetes imply a significant threat for the patients and are already present in the prediabetic state. Short term and long term complications, the burden of treatment, and reduced quality of life are major burdens of the disease. Accumulating data indicate that currently recommended therapeutic diet regimens in patients with obesity and diabetes are not sustainable on the long term. Novel concepts are therefore urgently needed. T2D occurs when insulin secretion from pancreatic beta-cells cannot sufficiently be increased to compensate for insulin resistance. Causes of beta-cell dysfunction are heterogeneous. In addition, the most important determinants of diabetes remission are the extend of weight loss and restoration of beta-cell function. In the course of diabetes progression, the inability to recover insulin secretion might identify the state of no return to normal glucose tolerance. It is therefore crucial to improve insulin secretion in treatment and prevention of diabetes. Up to now lifestyle intervention trials in prediabetes or pharmacological intervention trials in diabetes did not show improvement of insulin secretion after intervention. However, one recent small human trial shows that intermittent fasting (early time restricted fasting) is able to improve insulin secretion.Currently, there are no trials that examine the effect of intermittent fasting in individuals with a broad range of impaired glucose metabolism (from prediabetes to diabetes). Recently novel subtypes of diabetes and prediabetes with high risk for the early manifestation of diabetes complications have been identified. Currently, prevention strategies for this high risk individuals have not been examined yet. We will study for the first time the effectiveness of 4 weeks intermittent fasting on changes in insulin secretion capacity in subphenotypes of diabetes and in prediabetes.
Contact Information
- Charite University, Berlin, Germany
- German Center for Diabetes Research
- German Diabetes-Center, Leibniz-Institut in Düsseldorf
- German Institute of Human Nutrition
- Ludwig-Maximilians - University of Munich
- University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus
- University Hospital Heidelberg
- University Hospital Tuebingen
- University of Leipzig
- University of Luebeck
For direct contact, visit the study record on ClinicalTrials.gov .