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Monitored Home Exercise in Pregnancy

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Johns Hopkins University

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Gestational Diabetes
Mobile Health
Exercise
Pregnancy

Treatments

Behavioral: Monitored, At-Home Exercise Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03551535
IRB00173362

Details and patient eligibility

About

The Study Investigators intend to study the adherence to and effect of a prescribed, monitored at-home exercise regimen in a pregnant population at risk for gestational diabetes, with a specific goal of understanding factors relating to adoption and performance of regular, sustained physical activity.

Full description

The obesity epidemic has affected the reproductive age population with a resultant increase in Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM). Two to 10% of pregnant women are now diagnosed with gestational diabetes, imposing significant increased risk of maternal and fetal/neonatal morbidity and mortality.

Diabetes and obesity can both be combated by participating in daily physical activity, and has been shown to be beneficial for women of all ages, including women that are pregnant. The health benefits of exercise in pregnancy have been extensively studied, demonstrating improved pregnancy outcomes [both maternal (decreased gestational weight gain, decreased rates of cesarean section, and reduced rates of pregnancy induced complications such as hypertension and pre-eclampsia) and neonatal (reduction in proportion of large for gestational age infants)] with no evidence of harm when not contraindicated. Research should now focus on determining the most feasible, constructive, and efficient methods to improve fitness in pregnant women.

Pregnancy provides an ideal opportunity to focus on physical health and fitness; however, physical activity recommendations are rarely met and physical activity consistently decreases in pregnancy. With the development of mobile, technology-based interventions, at-home fitness regimens are now more accessible, thus reducing logistical constraints and burdens posed by traditional physical activity interventions. Moreover, the sustainability of at-home fitness regimens may be more successful long-term/post-intervention due to ease of engagement and more personalized motivational tools. Finally, wearable technology provides real-time feedback of progress and compliance to the intervention team, allowing improved monitoring of goals and compliance. In this way, contemporaneous, mobile health technology can maximize patient care by providing a novel, efficient, low burden, and scalable method to pursue pregnancy fitness, the economic implications of which could be significant.

The objective of this study is to determine the adherence to and effect of a prescribed, monitored at-home exercise regimen in a pregnant population at risk for gestational diabetes, with a specific goal of understanding factors relating to adoption and performance of regular, sustained physical activity.

There will be two arms of the study: an intervention group that will be enrolled in the BurnAlong program as well as receive FitBit heart rate + activity monitors to track adherence rates to the prescribed exercise regimen on BurnAlong, with subsequent motivational interventions triggered if compliance varies from prescription, and a comparison group who will receive standard obstetric care, which will include counseling about diet and exercise utilizing American Congress of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) guidelines and literature, as well as a FitBit heart rate + activity monitor to track activity levels via step count. The project team will not interact with the comparison group regarding the patient's activity levels during the study duration.

A sample size of 25 women for each arm of the study (50 women total) will be recruited. Basic demographic data will be obtained for all enrolled subjects, including age, parity, pre-pregnancy BMI, family history of diabetes, history of GDM (and number of previously affected pregnancies), preterm birth history, and baseline activity level (type of job, exercise, hours of standing). All participants will be asked to fill out a physical activity in pregnancy readiness survey as well as a baseline, previously validated international physical activity questionnaire, which will be utilized for comparison to activity level data collected during the study period. All enrolled patients will receive a FitBit heart rate + activity monitor, which will provide overall activity data in the form of steps per day through the duration of the trial. Those randomized to the intervention group will also utilize the FitBit during exercise sessions to provide data on duration, heart rate, and intensity, all of which will confirm that exercise is being accomplished as prescribed. This immediate exercise compliance feedback will enable automated motivational factors to engage the patient and optimize their continued exercise participation. Data regarding mode of delivery as well as infant details will be collected by chart review by the research team. Long term follow up may be obtained via email surveys, thus patient emails will be obtained at the time of enrollment.

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years of age or greater
  • Singleton gestation
  • History of gestational diabetes
  • OR
  • BMI ≥30
  • OR
  • Significant family history of diabetes (two or more first degree relatives with DM)

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-English or non-Spanish speaking patients
  • Women unwilling to provide consent
  • Patients with current diagnosis of diabetes
  • Multiple gestation
  • Medical or pregnancy complications and/or comorbidities that preclude exercise in pregnancy
  • Unwillingness to commit to the prescribed exercise program

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Physical Activity Intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will be allocated to a physical activity intervention to be performed 3-5 days per week
Treatment:
Behavioral: Monitored, At-Home Exercise Intervention
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients will receive standard counseling regarding activity recommendations in pregnancy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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