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Active You: Feasibility of a Unique Physical Activity Program to Prevent Diabetes and Heart Disease

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University of Pittsburgh

Status

Completed

Conditions

Prediabetes
Overweight and Obesity
Cardiovascular Risk Factor
Sedentary Behavior

Treatments

Behavioral: Be Active Your Way Booklet
Behavioral: The Physical Activity for The Heart (PATH) intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04621045
STUDY19090134

Details and patient eligibility

About

Individuals who are overweight/obese are more vulnerable to type 2 diabetes (T2D). Current evidence suggests that PA, even without dietary prescription, can be efficacious in preventing T2D. Yet most Americans, especially those who are overweight/obese, are not physically active. Socioenvironmental barriers to physical activity (PA) such as body image concerns and limited access to fitness facilities contribute to the low levels of PA observed in overweight/obese adults. Web-based PA programs have been developed to address these barriers, but the outcomes have been marginal. Qualitative studies suggest that individuals who are overweight/obese prefer PA programs that feature people they can relate to especially in body size, fitness status and age. Previously, the investigators have included these preferences in a technology-based Physical Activity for The Heart (PATH) intervention that leverages open source platforms, such as YouTube, to promote PA in any setting. In this application, the investigators propose to test the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of PATH in promoting PA and reducing cardiometabolic risk in adults who are overweight/obese and at high risk of diabetes. In Aim 1 the investigators will conduct a 12-week randomized clinical trial including 52 adults who are overweight/obese and at high risk of diabetes to assess the feasibility and acceptability of PATH. In Aim 2 investigators will examine the trend in PA and cardiometabolic risk change from baseline to post-intervention. This approach is innovative because it leverages open source technologies to provide low-cost, action-oriented PA resources that match the preferences of adults who are overweight/obese. This contribution will be significant because PATH could offer a convenient, enjoyable and scalable program that features "similar others" to promote PA in overweight/obese adults at high risk of diabetes.

Full description

Currently, only 20% of American adults attain the minimum 150 mins/week of MVPA recommended by the 2018 PA Guidelines for Americans. The low levels of PA are associated with the rising prevalence of obesity and T2D. Individuals who are overweight/obese need a higher volume of PA (~200-300 mins of weekly MVPA) to mitigate cardiometabolic risk, but they face complex multifaceted barriers that decrease their engagement in PA. Multiple studies exploring barriers and facilitators of PA among these individuals have emphasized the need for interventions that address weight-related impediments (e.g., stigma, fitness) and environmental barriers such as limited access to fitness facilities. In the last 2 decades web-based PA programs have been developed to address these barriers and to provide more interactive resources than those typically mailed to participants in home-based programs. In a recent analytic review of web-based PA interventions, 44 out of 72 studies reported significant increases in PA. However, 10 out of 13 studies focusing on adults who are overweight/obese reported no significant improvements in PA. Most of these studies employed interventions that are typically used in the general population (e.g., learning modules, email feedback, chat sessions) without adapting them to address barriers that are unique to individuals who are overweight/obese. Formative studies and social cognitive theory supports the need for PA interventions that feature individuals who are overweight/obese engaging in PA to motivate action and demonstrate success. In recent years, Internet ubiquity and creation of YouTube has enabled fitness experts across the globe to develop and share a wide variety of high quality workout videos designed to make PA convenient and enjoyable for all demographics. The investigators leveraged these resources and the aforementioned preference data to design an action-oriented PATH program tailored for individuals who are overweight/obese. The workout videos curated on PATH website were vetted by the study team and stakeholders. The investigators contribution in this project is expected to be a detailed understanding of how open sourced resources in interventions like PATH are received and utilized by overweight/obese adults.

Enrollment

52 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. 40-70 years old
  2. BMI≥25
  3. Have regular access to the internet (via computer or smart phone)
  4. Less than 90 mins of self-reported moderate to vigorous physical activity per week
  5. American Diabetes Association (ADA) risk ≥5
  6. Available for pre and post-intervention assessments.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Unstable conditions that may require supervised PA
  2. Physical limitations that may prohibit engagement in MVPA
  3. Pregnancy or intention to become pregnant during study, history of CVD
  4. Current participation in a PA study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

52 participants in 2 patient groups

PATH Treatment Group
Experimental group
Description:
The PATH group will be granted password protected access to one of the 3 PATH levels based on their baseline fitness status. The intervention is designed to help participants increase their baseline PA via health coaching, self-monitoring and pragmatic workout videos that provide convenient options for overcoming socio-environmental barriers to PA.
Treatment:
Behavioral: The Physical Activity for The Heart (PATH) intervention
Wait-list control group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants in this group will not have access to the PATH intervention until after 12 weeks when they cross over. After randomization, the control group will be provided with a copy of the Be Active Your Way booklet, developed by the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) to help individuals integrate PA in their daily lives.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Be Active Your Way Booklet

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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