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Feasibility of Yoga for Type-2 Diabetes

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Lifespan

Status

Completed

Conditions

Type2 Diabetes

Treatments

Behavioral: Standard Exercise
Behavioral: Nutrition Counseling
Behavioral: Iyengar yoga

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04982640
1U01AT011184

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will randomize 90 adults with type-2 diabetes (T2DM) from three different states (RI, MA, and AL) to a 12-week program of either (1) Iyengar yoga or (2) a Standard Exercise program. Follow up assessments occur at 3 and 6-months post-intervention. Results of this study will determine the ability to deliver these interventions with strong rigor and fidelity across multiple sites and will establish the feasibility and acceptability of this intervention across racially and ethnically diverse populations. The study will also examine factors (e.g., outcome expectations, barriers to home practice) that promote long-term adherence to yoga and/or physical activity.

Full description

Effective interventions are urgently needed to help adults with Type 2 diabetes (T2DM) achieve and maintain a healthy lifestyle. A significant and growing proportion of Americans, nearly 1 in 10, have T2DM. Uncontrolled diabetes causes serious damage to kidneys, eyes and nerves, and increases risk of heart disease and stroke. Controlling blood glucose is crucial to avoid these complications. Achieving glycemic control requires attention to multiple lifestyle behaviors including healthy eating and regular physical activity. However, only 39 percent of adults with diabetes are physically active. Traditional (western) exercise (e.g., walking and cycling) improves blood glucose levels in adults with T2DM. Long-term adherence is essential to maintain health benefits. However, individuals with T2DM face greater barriers to sustaining physical activity compared to their healthy peers due to the prevalence of overweight and obesity among those with T2DM and the co-morbidities of diabetes (e.g., poor circulation, foot care issues) that create more discomfort during exercise. Yoga is similar to traditional exercise in its ability to improve physical fitness but can be highly accommodating to those with physical limitations. Moreover, as a mindfulness practice, with emphasis on relaxation, meditation, and deep breathing, yoga's effects on stress reduction may have special relevance to people with T2DM. Increased mindfulness leads to improved self-care behaviors including physical activity. Recent meta-analyses suggest a beneficial effect of yoga on glycemic outcomes. However, existing studies have generally been of low quality and conducted with non-US populations.

This U01 application is the next logical step following successful conclusion of our pilot yoga intervention for adults with T2DM (R21AT008830). Feasibility and acceptability were high as measured by program attendance (> 80% of sessions), study completion (92% of participants) and participant satisfaction (M=4.6, +/- 0.57, 1-5 scale). Yoga also improved diabetes selfcare, quality of life and led to reductions in emotional distress and HbA1c. The proposed study will build on these efforts by randomizing a diverse sample of 120 adults with T2DM from three different states (RI, MA, and AL) to a 12-week program of either (1) yoga or (2) Standard Exercise (SE) with follow up at 3 and 6-months post-treatment. Results of this study will determine our ability to deliver these interventions with strong rigor and fidelity across multiple sites and will establish the feasibility and acceptability of this intervention across racially and ethnically diverse populations. We will also examine factors (e.g., outcome expectations, barriers to home practice) that promote long-term adherence to yoga/physical activity. Successful conclusion of this U01 will strengthen future applications for a multi-site RCT to rigorously test the efficacy of yoga for improving HbA1c and diabetes management. If supported, yoga could offer an attractive, sustainable form of physical activity for future diabetes management programs.

Enrollment

73 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age 18 years and older
  2. Diagnosis of type-2 diabetes, stable on medications
  3. Physician clearance

Exclusion criteria

  1. Serious comorbid condition (such as uncontrolled hypertension, glaucoma, heart failure).
  2. Complications of diabetes such as diabetic retinopathy, neuropathy and nephropathy
  3. Serious psychiatric disorder (e.g. psychosis, major depression, panic attacks, suicidality, or substance dependence).
  4. Extremely obese (i.e. Body Mass Index > 45 kg/m2)
  5. Currently engaged in yoga, Tai Chi, or other mindfulness-based practice the past six months
  6. Pregnant or trying to become pregnant
  7. Inability to read and write English

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

73 participants in 2 patient groups

Yoga
Experimental group
Description:
12-week program, 60 minutes, twice weekly group-delivered Iyengar yoga
Treatment:
Behavioral: Iyengar yoga
Behavioral: Nutrition Counseling
Standard Exercise
Active Comparator group
Description:
12-week, 60 minutes, twice weekly group-delivered aerobic exercise (e.g., walking) program
Treatment:
Behavioral: Nutrition Counseling
Behavioral: Standard Exercise

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Beth Bock, PhD; Kristen Walaska, BS

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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