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Knee Osteoarthritis (KOA) is a major cause of pain and disability, particularly in those of increasing age and body fat. As there are no very effective therapies for KOA, disease often progresses until knee replacement surgery is needed. It has been observed Vitamin D and Physical Activity (PA) levels are lower in those with KOA, increased age and body fat. As the relationship between KOA, Vitamin D and PA levels are not clearly understood, this study aims to explore these relationships and the acceptability/feasibility of PA and Vitamin D interventions in those who would likely to benefit from these interventions.
200-300 people, 50-70 years, BMI 30-40kg/m2, meeting American College of Rheumatology (ACR) KOA Guidelines, will be recruited from North Tyneside and Liverpool Hospital trusts November 2014-January 2016 to participate in a single cross-sectional study visit, which will measure: Vitamin D/Calcium serum levels, BMI/Body Fat, mobility, Quality of life and pain (by questionnaire), and PA levels.
Those participants with insufficient Vitamin D levels (25-50nmol/L) and PA levels (<30min moderate PA/week), will be invited to take part in a 3 month pilot RCT study.
>64 people will be recruited for the pilot RCT and equally randomly allocated to 1 of 4 intervention groups: Vitamin D (1 capsule a day: 2000IU), Placebo (identical capsule: 1 a day), PA (online PA programme) and PA and Vitamin D. Additionally at the end of the 12 week study visit, up to 20 participants will be invited to take part in a qualitative interview exploring their experience during the two studies.
Full description
The primary aim of this project is to test the feasibility and acceptability of increasing PA and Vitamin D supplementation interventions in older, obese people with knee osteoarthritis, with low baseline levels of PA and Vitamin D by performing a 2*2 design pilot randomized controlled trial and a qualitative interview.
The secondary aims of this project is to:
The project refers to 2 integrated studies:
These 2 studies will run consecutively over 2 winter periods or phases: phase 1 (November 2014- January 2015: cross sectional study followed by intervention study (February 2015- May 2015). Phase 2 will run over the same time periods 1 year later.
Cross-sectional study potential participant identification (November 2014-January 2015):
On Tyneside, the investigators will identify potential participants by screening GP surgery patient lists against inclusion criteria (see A17-1). At the Liverpool site, participants will be identified by research staff at hospital clinics (obesity). Potentially eligible people will be mailed/given a letter of invitation, together with information about the study and a consent form to take home and consider. Those interested in joining the study will be invited to contact their local research team using the contact information provided.
Cross-sectional study screening(November-January 2014/15):
Potential participants will complete a brief telephone screening questionnaire when they call to register their interest in the study to verify their eligibility. The CI will then call back to inform the potential participant of their eligibility and, if eligible, an appointment will be made to attend for the cross-sectional study visit (study visit 1).
Cross-sectional study visit: study visit 1 (November-January 2014/15):
Participants will attend an appointment at North Tyneside General Hospital or Aintree Hospital Liverpool (depending on their research site) lasting 1 hour 30 minutes. The visit will begin by reviewing the participant information sheet and completing the consent form. After this, several measurements will be completed:
Screening for eligibility for pilot RCT (January 2015):
Using data from the cross-sectional study, participants with low vitamin D concentration (25-50nmol/L) and low physical activity levels (<30min/week moderate activity)will be invited to participate in the pilot RCT.
Pilot RCT starter session (study visit 2) (February 2015/16):
Participants will attend a starter session for the pilot RCT study at North Tyneside General Hospital or Aintree hospital Liverpool. Prior to their appointment, all participants will be randomly allocated (stratified by gender) to 1 of 4 treatment arms:
The investigator will explain how to undertake the intervention, provide study materials and answer any questions the participant may have. Vitamin D and Placebo intervention will be blinded to the participants.
6 week follow up (study visit 3)(March 2015/16: All pilot RCT participants will be invited back at 6 weeks into their intervention period for a study visit lasting 1-1hr 15 minutes, at either NTGH or UHA. The same measurements taken during the cross-sectional study visit will be taken with some additional compliance measures.
12 week follow up (study visit 4) (April/May 2015/16): All pilot RCT participants will be invited back at 12 weeks into their intervention period for a study visit lasting 1-1hr 15 minutes at NTGH or UHA. This will be the study close for those not taking part in the qualitative interview. The same measurements will be taken as in study visit 3. Participants will be mailed feedback on their study measures including vitamin D status.
Qualitative interview (April/May 2015/16):
A subset of up to 20 participants will be invited to take part in a qualitative interview at NTGH or UHA directly after study visit 4. The interview will last 1hr and explore participants views in a range of topics which may identify areas of improvement in the design, delivery or practical arrangements of the studies in order to inform future studies in this area.
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Inclusion criteria
CROSS SECTIONAL STUDY
Obese: BMI 30-40kg/m2 as defined by WHO criteria
Older adults: 50 - 70 years
OA of the knee according to ACR Guidelines on symptomatic Knee OA criteria (using history and physical examination:
• Pain in the knee
AND 3 OF THE FOLLOWING:
Good understanding of written and spoken English (as no translation services will be available to this study).
PILOT STUDY
All of the inclusion criteria for the cross-sectional study (above), plus:
Low objectively measured levels of Vitamin D, defined as:
Insufficient (25-50nmol/L), excluding deficient (<25 nmol/L), the 25OHD concentration at which symptoms as a result of Vitamin D deficiency commonly occur.
Low PA recorded from accelerometers defined as:
<30min/week of moderate PA, <15min/week vigorous PA (2*credit of moderate activity) defined as being 'inactive' by UK government guidelines. Activities only counted if they occurred in >10mins bouts. Activity was defined as moderate if it made the participant 'breathe faster, feel warmer or sweat' and increased heart rate. Activities identified as moderate included: brisk walking, cycling, gardening, housework, DIY, climbing stairs and carrying heavy loads.
Exclusion criteria
CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY
PILOT STUDY
The same exclusion criteria as the cross-sectional study, plus:
Conditions which can interfere with Vitamin D supplement adsorption:
Conditions which can affect normal baseline levels of vitamin D:
Current conditions which may be made worse/prompts complications of by vitamin D consumption
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
45 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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