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Effects of Physical Exercise on Postmenopausal Risk Factors in Women With Osteopenia (ACTLIFE)

U

University of Erlangen-Nürnberg Medical School

Status

Completed

Conditions

Osteopenia, Osteoporosis

Treatments

Other: High Intensity Resistance (HIT-RT) and Endurance exercise (HIIT)
Other: Wellness

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03959995
ER_ACTLIFE

Details and patient eligibility

About

Menopause usually have a serious impact on a woman's life, associated with negative consequences for health and quality of life. Early preventive assessments are very difficult to implement due to the complex hormone-deficiency-induced effects on a large variety of organs and systems with estrogen receptors. In fact, only a few types of interventions have the potential to comprehensively improve the various risk factors and complaints of the menopausal transition. In detail, however, not every form of exercise training or every training protocol is effective for exerting positive effects on selected risk factors. In particular, the training concept for addressing musculoskeletal or cardio-metabolic risk factors differ fundamentally.

In several studies, we confirmed the effect of different complex training programs on risk factors of different postmenopausal female cohorts with special consideration of osteoporotic aspects. The training programs applied in this context were characterized by the consistent implementation of recognized training principles and an in general exercise intensity-oriented approach. Recent studies confirmed the effectiveness of this proceeding for women with relevant postmenopausal risk factors including low bone strength. However, the crucial issue of the most effective, feasible and easily customizable training protocol for addressing postmenopausal risk factors remains to be answered, taking into account that the majority of exercise programs were realized in an ambulatory group setting.

The aim of the study will be to evaluate the effects of an optimized physical training on risk factors and complaints of (early) postmenopausal women with special consideration of the osseous fracture risk.

Note (05.06.2020): Of importance, the intervention has to be cancelled due to COVID-19 lockdown in March 2020 after 13 months of intervention.

Enrollment

27 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

48 to 58 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • (early)postmenopausal women, ( normal menopause, 1-5 years post)
  • Osteopenia and osteoporosis at the lumbar spine or femoral neck Bone Mineral Density (BMD) <-1.0 standard deviation (SD) T-Score, WHO)

Exclusion criteria

  • BMD <-4.0 SD T-Score (BMD threshold for pharmaceutical therapy according to Dachverband Osteologie (DVO) guideline (mandatory for Germany, Austria, Suisse) for woman 50-60 years).
  • Prevalent clinical, low-trauma fractures
  • Diseases and drugs with relevant effects on bone and muscle metabolism (e.g. glucocorticoids >7.5 mg/d or bisphosphonate therapy); individual case assessment
  • Diseases and drugs with relevant effects on cardiometabolic risk factors (e.g. severe hypertension with corresponding medical therapy); individual case assessment
  • Severe cardiovascular events (e.g. stroke, coronary infarction) in the past.
  • Other conditions, diseases that exclude exercise training in a group (≤10 persons).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

27 participants in 2 patient groups

exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise group
Treatment:
Other: High Intensity Resistance (HIT-RT) and Endurance exercise (HIIT)
control
Sham Comparator group
Description:
active control group
Treatment:
Other: Wellness

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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