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Diabetes CKD Lifestyle Technology Study

NYU Langone Health logo

NYU Langone Health

Status

Completed

Conditions

Chronic Kidney Disease
Diabetes
Obesity

Treatments

Behavioral: Social Cognitive Theory

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02266823
14-00563

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to pilot test an mHealth technology-supported behavioral intervention designed to engage patients with diabetes and concurrent chronic kidney disease (CKD) in multiple behaviors which aim to reduce CKD progression. Participants will be randomized to the 6-month lifestyle intervention or to a wait-list control. The lifestyle intervention will be modeled after that used in the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) and the counseling intervention will be based on SCT, which will be paired with mobile technology-based dietary and physical activity monitoring. The wait-list control will receive 6 months of standard medical care followed by a delayed, but less intensive, 6-month intervention.

Full description

The purpose of this study is to develop and pilot test a lifestyle intervention in obese individuals with t2dm and concurrent stage 2-4 ckd. The counseling intervention will be based on social cognitive theory and supported by mobile (ipad) self-monitoring. Mobile self-monitoring is featured in the intervention to encourage vigilance to the diet in a manner that is not burdensome, enhance self-efficacy by integrating complex information regarding the ckd dietary regimen with a calorie-restricted diet, and permit real-time monitoring of weight, blood glucose, blood pressure, and self-reported diet and physical activity by the study team.

Specifically, the investigators will develop the methods for and pilot test the ckd lifestyle intervention in stage 2-4 ckd patients and explore the impact of the intervention on: (a) weight and fat mass, (b) blood pressure, (c) physical activity, (d) urinary sodium excretion, (e) serum phosphorus and calcium-phosphorus product, (f) kidney function as measured by serum cystatin-c, and (g) serum lipids. Additionally, we will evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of this intervention in terms of: (h) recruitment and retention, (i) time and cost associated with training ckd patients in technology-based self-monitoring and in delivering the intervention, (j) patterns of self-monitoring adherence over time, and (k) participant satisfaction with the intervention. Finally, we will describe: (l) the extent to which the intervention differentially adversely affects the nutritional health of participants as evidenced by low serum albumin or serum prealbumin; a body mass index (bmi) that falls below 20kg/m2; and subjective assessment of nutritional risk (e.g. Nausea, diarrhea, anorexia).

Enrollment

270 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • In order to be eligible for the study, the individual must be 40 years of age or older; have a DRG Code of T2DM, GFR of 15-89 ml/min/1.73m2 and a BMI >30 kg/m2. The participant's physician of record will have verified that his/her patient can safely participant in an intervention study that involves weight loss and a goal of 150 minutes/week of moderate physical activity (comparable to brisk walking).

Exclusion criteria

  • Those with the following characteristics will be excluded by the investigators:

    1. unable or unwilling to provide informed consent; (2) unable to participate meaningfully in an intervention that involves group sessions (e.g., due to uncorrected hearing impairment, non-English-speaking); (3) unable to read or otherwise use an iPad to monitor dietary intake, physical activity, and weight (e.g., blind, illiterate); (4) unwilling to accept randomization assignment; (5) pregnant, or plans to become pregnant in the next 12 months, less than 3 months postpartum, or nursing or within 6 weeks of having completed nursing; (6) weight loss of > 10% in the past 6 months except for postpartum weight loss; and (7) individuals who are institutionalized (e.g., in a nursing home or personal care facility, or those who are incarcerated and have no control over their diet).

will exclude from the study those with underlying diseases which would increase the risk of participating in an intervention involving caloric restriction and physical activity. Such individuals would include those requiring treatment for cancer, exclusive of skin cancer other than melanoma, in the past 2 years; infectious diseases including untreated AIDS and active tuberculosis; uncontrolled hypertension of >190 mmHg SBP or >105 mmHg DBP despite treatment; stroke or TIA in the past 6 months; conditions requiring the use of home oxygen; or other chronic disease or condition likely to limit life span to < 1 year. A recent Institute of Medicine report suggests that reducing dietary sodium below 1,840 mg/day in those with mid- to late-stage heart failure may increase adverse events or mortality. Thus investigators will exclude those with heart failure.

Because of the dietary requirements of a pregnant woman, and the nature of weight loss and gain with pregnancy, inclusion of pregnant women in the study would confound the study results. Those who become pregnant during the study will be withdrawn from the study.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

270 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention: Lifestyle A.
Active Comparator group
Description:
Lifestyle A will receive an iPad loaded with a self-monitoring program used to support vigilance, reduce the information processing requirements, make readily available the information required to make good self-management decisions, provide real-time feedback, and permit targeted counseling in the context within which lifestyle behaviors occur. Using Social Cognitive Theory, the study dietitian will counsel participants via videoconferencing software on the iPad. Using the detailed nutritional and physical activity feedback from the self monitoring programs, the dietitian will use SCT to engage the participants in order to initiate healthy behavior change whilst reducing the demands of commuting for in person nutritional counseling.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Social Cognitive Theory
Intervention: Lifestyle B.
Other group
Description:
Participants randomized to this group will receive 6 months of routine care followed by a delayed intervention. Lifestyle B will employ the same diet and physical activity prescription as Lifestyle A as described above. Using Social Cognitive Theory, the study dietitian will counsel participants via videoconferencing software on the iPad. Using the detailed nutritional and physical activity feedback from the self monitoring programs, the dietitian will use SCT to engage the participants in order to initiate healthy behavior change whilst reducing the demands of commuting for in person nutritional counseling.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Social Cognitive Theory

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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