A new study challenges the hype around intermittent fasting, finding that limiting eating to an eight-hour window does not improve metabolic health if calorie intake remains the same. Researchers from German institutions observed shifts in the body's internal clocks but no changes in insulin sensitivity or cardiovascular markers. The results suggest that calorie control, rather than meal timing alone, drives potential health gains.
Intermittent fasting, particularly time-restricted eating (TRE), has gained popularity as an easy way to enhance metabolic health and manage weight. TRE typically confines daily meals to a 10-hour window, followed by at least 14 hours of fasting. While animal research indicates protection against obesity and metabolic issues, human studies have shown inconsistent results, often confounded by unintentional calorie cuts.
To clarify this, the ChronoFast trial, led by Prof. Olga Ramich from the German Institute of Human Nutrition Potsdam-Rehbruecke (DIfE) and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, involved 31 women with overweight or obesity. In a randomized crossover design, participants followed two isocaloric eating schedules for two weeks each: early TRE from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and late TRE from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. Meals were identical in calories and nutrients, with blood samples, glucose tests, and activity monitoring ensuring precise control.
The study, published in Science Translational Medicine, revealed no significant improvements in insulin sensitivity, blood sugar, lipids, or inflammation after either schedule. However, meal timing influenced circadian rhythms. Using the BodyTime assay developed by Prof. Achim Kramer, researchers detected an average 40-minute shift in internal clocks during late eating, with participants also delaying bedtime and wake-up.
"Our results suggest that the health benefits observed in earlier studies were likely due to unintended calorie reduction, rather than the shortened eating period itself," Ramich explained. First author Beeke Peters added, "The timing of food intake acts as a cue for our biological rhythms—similar to light."
Ramich emphasized focusing on energy balance for weight loss or metabolic improvements. Future work may examine TRE combined with calorie restriction and individual factors like chronotype.