Grant Details
| Grant Number: |
1R21CA299749-01A1 Interpret this number |
| Primary Investigator: |
Playdon, Mary |
| Organization: |
Utah State Higher Education System--University Of Utah |
| Project Title: |
CHRONO-CUISINE: Investigating Meal Timing Patterns and Cancer Susceptibility |
| Fiscal Year: |
2026 |
Abstract
SUMMARY. Regulating the timing of meals and snacks to re-align the body’s circadian clock and improve
metabolic health is emerging as a promising approach for cancer prevention in early animal and small clinical
studies. Yet, a major barrier to studying meal timing and cancer is that large population studies rarely measure
meal timing, which makes it impossible to conduct epidemiological studies of meal timing and cancer risk on a
large-scale and across individuals with different biological and environmental characteristics and varied meal
timing practices. Although obesity and its related metabolic dysregulation are important risk factors for at least
13 cancer types, weight management is notoriously difficult in the long-term. Behavioral strategies are needed
that can improve metabolic risk factors for cancer but that do not necessarily rely on weight loss. Herein, we
propose to discover and then externally validate novel objective biomarkers of meal timing practices, then test
their relationship with incidence of breast (BC), endometrial (EC), and colorectal (CRC) cancers, three of the
most prevalent obesity-linked cancers. Our central hypothesis is that meal timing is associated with
perturbations in blood metabolomic profile, and with obesity-related cancer incidence in free-living humans. We
will test our hypothesis with unique data from large-scale cohorts with validated measures of meal timing and
sleep and longitudinal metabolomics data measured on the same metabolomics platform to facilitate data
harmonization. In Aim 1, we will Identify biomarkers of meal timing patterns using a discovery and external
validation design in the Cancer Prevention Study 3 Diet Assessment Sub-study (DAS) (n=750) and the
Interactive Diet and Activity Tracking in AARP (IDATA) Study (n=718) and measure their association with risk
of obesity-related cancer in the Cancer Prevention Study 2 (CPS-2, 782 BC matched sets; 517 CRC matched
sets with 16-year follow-up time) and CPS-3 cohorts (1695 BC patients, 1983 controls, 3-year follow-up). In
Aim 2, we will examine whether there is large-scale, real-world evidence that meal timing patterns are
associated with obesity-related cancer risk among 185,000 US adults in the CPS-3 cohort. The proposed study
will answer critical, outstanding questions about which meal timing practices are associated with cancer-
relevant metabolic factors and risk of obesity-related cancers in a real-world scenario and identify objective
biomarkers of meal timing behaviors that will facilitate large-scale investigations of meal timing and cancer risk
at the population level. These meal timing biomarkers could also be used to assess response to meal timing
interventions in clinical studies. Following successful completion of this project, we plan to apply the resulting
biomarker profiles to study meal timing and cancer risk across international cohorts in the Consortium of
Metabolomics Studies (COMETS). Epidemiological research stemming from our study findings will be vitally
important prior to issuing public health guidance on meal timing for cancer prevention.
Publications
None