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A Dyadic e-Health System on Enhancing Healthy Lifestyles of Older Adults With Sarcopenia

T

The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Sarcopenia

Treatments

Behavioral: e-Health System with nutritional advice
Behavioral: The Exercise Training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06088511
HSEARS20230817002

Details and patient eligibility

About

Sarcopenia is defined as a reduction in muscle mass, muscle strength, and physical performance. Without proper management, sarcopenia may result in adverse health outcomes. Continuously maintain healthy lifestyle, such as being physically active, taking adequate protein in daily diet, are effective in preventing and managing sarcopenia. e-Health has been used successfully to translate evidence-based lifestyle interventions into daily practice by enhancing self-awareness, promoting self-monitor and sustaining self-management for other populations with different health problems.

This project aims to develop, implement and evaluate the preliminary effects of an e-Health System to encourage older adults with sarcopenia to maintain healthy lifestyles (i.e. regular exercise and adequate intake of high-quality protein). Combining the concepts of smart health, the System aims to enhance users' self-monitoring (Level 1) and self-management (Level 2) of sarcopenia.

Level 1 aims to enhance participants' and their family members' awareness of the risks of sarcopenia through continued monitoring. The System will perform baseline and regular subjective (such as self-administered questionnaires) and objective (such as activity levels by an embedded accelerometer) assessments on the participants. The embedded risk calculator in the System will analyze the scores obtained from different assessments and then recommend participants to follow the healthy lifestyle interventions in Level 2.

Level 2 aims to enhance participants' and their family members' ability to manage the health problems related sarcopenia. The System will recommend two major evidence-based lifestyle interventions, including physical exercise and nutritional advice, based on the analysis of the assessment data in Level 1. These interventions will be conducted during the four face-to-face sessions and continuously self-practised at home. The interventions will provide interactive, immediate feedback to the participants and their family members to improve their involvement. The participants and their family members can monitor their progress via the System.

The investigators hypothesize that the experimental group who has adopted the e-Health system in their daily life to manage sarcopenia will exhibit milder symptoms of sarcopenia and more sustainable self-management ability than participants in the control group who has received usual care.

Full description

Sarcopenia is defined as a reduction in appendicular skeletal muscle mass, muscle strength, and physical performance. The prevalence of sarcopenia is high, and it appears in about 25% of local older adults. Without proper management, sarcopenia may result in adverse health outcomes leading to poor quality of life and premature institutionalization. It also causes a burden on their family members. The current evidence shows that preventing and managing sarcopenia with healthy lifestyle interventions, which include maintaining a physically active lifestyle, ideal body weight, adequate protein intake and social participation, tend to produce positive outcomes if older adults can continuously maintain these healthy lifestyles.

e-Health was defined as "the cost-effective and secure use of information and communications technologies in support of health". e-Health has been used successfully to translate evidence-based lifestyle interventions into daily practice by enhancing self-awareness, promoting self-monitor and sustaining self-management for addressing obesity in young people, smoking cessation in adults and promoting physical activities in older adults with sedentary lifestyle. For example, a systematic review of 15 papers with 1967 participants compared the e-Health based interventions with the control groups to reduce sedentary behaviour and increase physical activity levels. The results showed that the group that received e-Health based interventions had a significantly increased level of physical activity compared with the control groups.

Despite all these potential benefits of using e-Health to manage health, studies indicated that older adults tend to be reluctant to use new technologies due to the inability to integrate them into their daily lives. Consequently, it has been posited that older adults may be less capable or willing to adopt e-Health strategies to manage their health. One possible explanation for this low adaptation rate is that older adults cannot integrate the technologies into their daily lives. Studies have argued that the motivation of participants to sustain the use of the new technologies depends on the extent to which the participants feel that the technologies can fulfil their needs, align with their goals, and meet their expectations. In addition, older adults often attempt to adopt new habits, such as using a new electronic device, maintaining a physically active lifestyle, while being embedded in social networks comprising, amongst others, friends and family. However, current e-Health-based interventions are usually focused on individuals. Given that empirical evidence highlights the role of family members in influencing older adults' behaviour, including an adaptation of technologies and healthy lifestyles, there is a need to consider the potential benefits of involving family support when delivering an e-Health based intervention to older adults.

The World Health Organization's global strategy for digital health emphasizes the importance of empowering older adults to integrate technology into their daily life. Family members who have a close relationship with older adults can support them in adopting the e-Health based interventions for self-management of the health problems. Dyads are defined as two individuals (such as, family caregiver and care recipient) maintaining a socially close relationship. There has been some evidence suggesting that e-Health based interventions targeting the promotion of psychosocial wellbeing through a dyadic approach benefit both care recipients and caregivers. However, most positive findings were from studies targeting children/adolescent-parents dyads or young adult dyads. In addition, behavioural change (such as adopting a new healthy diet habit) is interdependent between care recipients and family caregivers. With the support of family, older adults can easily familiarise themselves with the technical design and functions of the e-Health platform, overcome barriers to adopting the technology and sustain healthy lifestyles in their daily routine. Through the dyadic approach, family members may co-develop an action plan to target the health goals, receive personalized feedback on participants' performance and obtain encouragement from the family members via the e-health platform. Family support may facilitate and motivate older adults (participants) to continue using the e-Health platform and sustain healthy lifestyles. Promising evidence suggests that dyadic interventions can deliver synergistic benefits to both family caregivers and care recipients. However, a limited empirical study has adopted a dyadic approach for older adults to use e-Health platforms to enhance their healthy lifestyles for managing sarcopenia.

Aims and objectives

An e-Health system which comprises of the concept of smart health (i.e. refer to individual demographic and health data) will be developed. This project aims to evaluate the effectiveness of an e-Health System delivered in a dyadic approach to encourage older adults with sarcopenia to maintain healthy lifestyles (i.e. adequate intake of high-quality protein and regular exercises). Two objectives of this study include:

  1. to develop a two-level e-Health system to enhance self-monitoring and self-management of sarcopenia
  2. to evaluate the immediate effects (4 weeks) and the mid-term effects (after engaging in the e-Health system for 12 weeks).

The investigators hypothesize that the experimental group who has adopted the e-Health system in their daily life to manage sarcopenia will exhibit milder symptoms of sarcopenia, better mobility and physical function and better quantity and quality of protein intake, greater self-efficacy and more sustainable self-management ability than participants in the control group who has received usual care.

Enrollment

88 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Community-dwelling older people aged > 60 years;
  • Meeting the diagnostic criteria of sarcopenia according to the Asian Sarcopenia Working Group (ASWG):
  • Early-stage sarcopenia refers to the fulfillment of one of the following criteria: low handgrip strength < 28 kg for men and < 18 kg for women, low muscle quality as reflected by low appendicular skeletal muscle mass (ASM) /height squared < 7 kg/m2 for men and <5.7 kg/m2 for women, or low physical performance with a Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) score of < 9;
  • Able to communicate, read, and write in Chinese without significant hearing and vision problems to ensure that our instructions are understood;
  • Own a smartphone, and able to access the internet at home or elsewhere;
  • Reside with family and have at least one daily shared meal (family is defined as an individual who has a significant personal relationship with the participant, such as next of kin, spouse and the individual must be at aged > 18); and
  • Able to identify a family member who has a smartphone and is willing to support the participant to use the e-Health System.

Exclusion criteria

  • With any form of disease or condition that might affect food intake and digestion (such as severe heart or lung diseases, diabetes, cancer, or autoimmune diseases);
  • Currently suffering from acute gouty arthritis or had a gout attack in the past year;
  • Taking medications that may influence eating behaviour, digestion, or metabolism (such as weight loss medication);
  • Being addicted to alcohol, which might affect the effort to change dietary behaviour;
  • Having impaired mobility, which might affect participation in exercise training, as defined by a modified Functional Ambulatory Classification score of < 7;
  • Having renal impairment, based on the renal function blood test which will be screened by a geriatrician;
  • Having depressive symptomatology, defined by a Geriatric Depression Scale score of > 8;
  • Suffering from dementia (i.e., MoCA<20 or clinical dementia rating ≥1);
  • Having any medical implant device such as a pacemaker, because low-level currents will flow through the body when doing the bioelectric impedance analysis (BIA by InBody S10, Korea), which may cause the device to malfunction.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

88 participants in 2 patient groups

The Experimental Group
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in the Experimental Group will attend an implementation program guided by the Self-Determination Theory (SDT). The 12-week intervention consists of a 4-week, group-based, face-to-face supervised sessions conducted by a well-trained Research Assistant, plus an 8-week self-management phase.
Treatment:
Behavioral: e-Health System with nutritional advice
Behavioral: The Exercise Training
The Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants in The Control Group will attend 4-weekly, group-based, regular face-to-face health talks about managing sarcopenia with the exact dosage provided to the intervention group.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Justina Liu, PhD; Amy Cheung, MA

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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