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Does Participation in a Pre-Operative Physical Activity Program Improve Patient Outcomes and Quality of Life?

U

University of Manitoba

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Roux-En-Y Gastric Bypass
Quality of Life
Bariatric Surgery
Obesity
Exercise

Treatments

Behavioral: ENCOURAGEING START

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03049696
H2016:283

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary objective of the study is to determine whether participation in a pre-bariatric surgery physical activity and behavior modification/education program (ENCOURAGEING START) that is tailored to the unique needs of obese bariatric surgery patients, improves physical fitness, surgical outcomes, patient health and quality of life. Short- (one year) and long- (five year) term outcomes will be compared to matched historical controls (1:1) based on age, gender, and body mass index (BMI) from the existing Manitoba Centre for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (CMBS) database. Our findings will determine whether a pre-bariatric surgery physical activity and behavior modification/education program results in improve surgical and patient outcomes and inform the development of evidence-based physical activity (PA) guidelines for bariatric surgery patients and improved CMBS program delivery.

Full description

The objective of this study is to design and implement a 16-week pre-operative physical activity and behaviour modification/education program (ENCOURAGEING Start) based on a collaborative partnership among the Centre for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (CMBS), the University of Manitoba Faculty of Kinesiology and Recreation Management, and Victoria General Hospital (VGH). Twenty-four CMBS patients, approved for bariatric surgery, will participate in the 16 week ENCOURAGEING START program. The goal is to develop evidence-based pre-operative physical activity (PA) guidelines and tools to improve bariatric surgery program delivery and patient outcomes. All patients will receive the Centre for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (CMBS) standard of care including two to four multidisciplinary visits over six months, exercise counseling from a kinesiologist, completion of a behavior modification program (Craving ChangeTM), and achievement of lifestyle and dietary modification goals in order to be scheduled for surgery. An interdisciplinary team of nurses, psychologists, dietitians, kinesiologists, anesthetists and internal medicine professionals participate in patient preparation. Intervention group participants will also complete the 16-week supervised physical activity and behaviour modification/education program (ENCOURAGEING START) at no cost. The first eight weeks of the ENCOURAGEING START program is a structured exercise and education period that patients must attend. During the second eight week period, opportunities for drop-in physical activity will be provided or patients can opt for at home exercise. Patient participation in physical activity will be monitored and follow-up with their experiences will be completed (by phone/email). A successfully developed and tested evidence-based physical activity promotion model (designed by co-applicant Dr. Todd Duhamel) has been tailored to the unique needs of the bariatric surgery patient population. It has been been shown successful at increasing weekly physical activity levels in patients with Body Mass Indexes (BMIs) between 30 to 35 and targets the physical and psycho-social-cognitive aspects of health. The intervention will be delivered by a kinesiologist (Certified Exercise Physiologist). Intervention group participants will complete two sessions of supervised, structured exercise classes per week for eight weeks. Progression to a moderate/high-intensity interval program based the patient's capabilities will occur. This approach has been shown to be safe and effective in the bariatric patient population. Participants will also attend education sessions on risk factor reduction, healthy eating, physical activity/exercise, stress management and promotion of self-managed care. Principles of shared decision-making will be utilized so providers and patients involved in the intervention will have shared control of treatment decisions. During the second eight week interval of the 16-week intervention, participants will be provided with access to facilitate attendance at drop-in exercise classes at the Active Living Centre (University of Manitoba). Participants will have the opportunity to meet with the kinesiologist on at least four occasions (60 minutes per meeting) throughout the 16-week intervention. This will provide participants with additional physical activity counseling if they would like more support to overcome the barriers that have prevented them from being physically active in the past. This counseling (and referral aspect) of the model builds upon the earlier experiences in the program and recognizes the importance of support from colleagues, friends and family. Participant attendance during the 16-week intervention will be monitored. In order to ensure adequate participation rates for this study, participant follow-up will be completed by telephone or email (based on participant consent and preference). All patients complete a liquid diet (900 calories per day) for two weeks prior to their surgery in order to reduce intra-abdominal obesity and facilitate the procedure. The study will follow the intension to treat (ITT) model and patient exclusion/withdrawal will be documented and reported according to the CONSORT guidelines. A time series quasi-experimental design will be used to document changes in outcome measures. Short (one year) and long-term (five year) outcomes will be compared to matched historical controls 1:1 based on age, gender, BMI from the existing CMBS database with the goal to determine whether participation in the program improves physical fitness, surgical outcomes, patient health and quality of life for obese patients. The primary outcome of the study is the change in the 6-minute walk test (6MWT) that measures the distance a patient walks in six minutes, unassisted and at a self-selected pace; a validated measure of physical fitness and a well-established measure of functional capacity that is easily tested and in expensive to administer. The 6MWT has been used to measure improvements in functional capacity in pre- and post-bariatric surgery studies. The secondary outcomes include anthropometric measurements (height and weight, BMI (kg/m2), neck circumference, waist and hip circumference, and body composition (Bioelectric Impedance Analysis; BIA), strength measurements (sit to stand and half-squat tests to assess dynamic balance, flexibility and muscular endurance, and the hand grip and arm curl tests to assess upper limb muscle strength and dynamic muscular endurance of the biceps), physical activity level (Actigraph accelerometer), cardiovascular disease risk measurement (blood pressure, total, LDL, and HDL cholesterol and triacylglyceride measurements, blood glucose, HA1c, small and large artery elasticity), frailty measurement, patient quality of life/satisfaction/mental health and depression surveys (Laval Health Related Quality of Life Questionnaire, PHQ9 and HAM-D; see included surveys), Self-compassion, anxiety and physical activity questionnaires, and CMBS program outcome measures (surgical complication rate, hospital length of stay, comorbidity resolution, continued participation in physical activity, weight loss, and weight loss maintenance). Tests at Week 0 (pre-intervention) include the 6MWT, anthropometric, body composition, strength, physical activity level (accelerometer), quality of life/mental health surveys, cardiovascular/ diabetes disease risk measurement, frailty measurement, and arterial elasticity. Tests at week 16 (post-intervention) and 12 months (post-operative) will include 6MWT, anthropometric, strength, physical activity level (accelerometer), quality of life/mental health patient satisfaction surveys, cardiovascular/ diabetes disease risk measurement, frailty measurement, and arterial elasticity. The quality of life/mental health patient satisfaction surveys will be also be completed at the 5 years post-operative period. Two REDCap databases (Data and Survey) will be designed and implemented to facilitate data collection of surgical and patient outcomes, longitudinal survey deployment and patient responses. The surgical outcome metrics are based on the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery's (ASMBS) quality indicators for bariatric surgery with the goal to inform and define standardized outcome measures for RYGB surgery in Manitoba and Canada.

Enrollment

48 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Male and female obese adults (Body Mass Index equal to or greater than 35 and under 55);
  • over 18 years old,
  • approved for publicly funded Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery by the Centre for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery,
  • able to attend the regular training and education sessions of the intervention program.

Exclusion criteria

  • Exclusion criteria include any orthopedic, neurologic or cardiopulmonary conditions that preclude moderately strenuous exercise,
  • Body Mass Index over 55 (super-obese),
  • sleeve gastrectomy, and
  • the inability to commit to attending the regular training and education sessions of the intervention program.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

48 participants in 2 patient groups

Control Group (Standard of Care)
No Intervention group
Description:
All patients will receive the Centre for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery (CMBS) standard of care including two to four multidisciplinary visits over six months, exercise counseling (kinesiologist), completion of a the CMBS behavior modification program (Craving ChangeTM), and achievement of lifestyle and dietary modification goals in order to be scheduled for surgery. The standard of care will be used as the control group (n=24). Matched historical controls (1:1) will be selected (based on age, gender, and body mass index) from the existing CMBS database.
Intervention Group-ENCOURAGEING START
Experimental group
Description:
Intervention group participants (n=24) will receive the standard of care and complete a 16-week supervised physical activity/behaviour modification program at no cost. The first eight weeks of the program involves structured exercise (two per week) and education classes that patients must attend. Progression to a moderate/high-intensity interval program based the patient's capabilities will occur. Participants will also attend education sessions on risk factor reduction, healthy eating, exercise, stress management and promotion of self-managed care. During the second eight week period, participants will be given access to attend drop-in exercise classes or can opt to complete at home exercise. Participants will have an opportunity to meet with the kinesiologist on at least 4 occasions (60 minutes/meeting) for additional physical activity counseling and assistance with overcoming barriers preventing physical activity.
Treatment:
Behavioral: ENCOURAGEING START

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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