← Research Library

Tier 1 · Peer-reviewed primaryreviewstrong

Effects of Intermittent Fasting on Health, Aging, and Disease

de Cabo R, Mattson MP · 2019 · New England Journal of Medicine

DOI: 10.1056/NEJMra1905136View source ↗

Intermittent fasting elicits evolutionarily conserved, adaptive cellular responses that are integrated between and within organs.

Summary

This NEJM review summarizes evidence that intermittent fasting regimens — alternate-day fasting, time-restricted eating, and periodic multi-day fasts — engage a "metabolic switch" from glucose-derived energy to fat- and ketone-derived energy after hepatic glycogen is depleted, typically within 12–36 hours of fasting depending on the individual and the protocol. The authors argue that repeated exposure to this switch produces adaptive responses across organ systems, including improved insulin sensitivity, reduced inflammation, increased mitochondrial biogenesis, enhanced autophagy, and improved stress resistance in cells. The review compiles findings from animal models alongside the available human trials at the time of publication.

The review notes that, despite preclinical signals being strong and consistent, the human evidence base is more heterogeneous: the largest gains in metabolic markers (fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, lipid profile, inflammatory markers) appear in adults with obesity or metabolic syndrome, while effects in lean, metabolically healthy individuals are smaller. The authors flag practical issues — adherence over months, the early-fast hunger and irritability phase, and the lack of long-term outcome data — as the main barriers to clinical adoption rather than safety in healthy adults.

Talking it through with practitioners

The free Skool community is where we discuss what new evidence means for actual cycles.

Join the free community →

Tags

Not medical advice. This page summarizes primary research. It is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified clinician. See safety for exclusion criteria.