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Patient-Centered Weight Loss Program for Knee Replacement Patients (PACE)

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Northwestern University

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2
Phase 1

Conditions

ARTHROPLASTY, REPLACEMENT

Treatments

Behavioral: Delayed PACE
Behavioral: PACE

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT02728661
K12HS023011

Details and patient eligibility

About

PACE is a patient-centered weight loss program that was developed specifically for knee replacements based on input from stakeholders, including knee replacement patients, physical therapists, and orthopedic surgeons. In this pilot study, participants undergoing knee replacement will be randomized to either start a weight loss program before surgery (PACE) or after surgery (Delayed PACE). Both programs will receive a 14-week intervention and complete assessments at baseline (up to 6 weeks prior to surgery), 12 weeks after surgery, and 26 weeks after surgery.

Full description

It is estimated that half of patients diagnosed with knee osteoarthritis (OA) will need a total knee replacement (TKR) during their lifetime. Of patients who need a TKR, 80-95% are overweight or obese. While patients are encouraged to lose weight, limited, if any, guidance is provided to achieve recommended weight loss. Many patients perceive that TKR is a necessary precursor for the initiation of weight loss. Yet, 66% of patients actually gain weight by 2 years after surgery. Patients undergoing TKR not only face unique barriers (i.e., pain, mobility limitations, motivation) to weight loss, but also have to balance pre- and post-operative concerns from physicians, surgeons, and rehabilitation specialists. To best accommodate the needs of both patients (pre- and post-TKR) and healthcare professionals (i.e., surgeon, physical therapist), patient and stakeholder engagement and activation is imperative in the development of a patient-centered weight loss intervention. Investigators completed 20 interviews with patients pre- and post-TKR and identified weight loss barriers, preferred intervention components (e.g., delivery method, contact frequency, self-monitoring modality) and patient-reported outcomes (e.g., physical function, pain) viewed as critical by patients. Investigators developed a patient-centered weight loss program (PACE) guided by these results and additional input from stakeholders to meet the needs of patients and healthcare professionals. PACE is a randomized pilot study comparing weight loss and patient-reported outcomes between PACE (program starting up to 6 weeks pre-TKR to 12 weeks post-TKR) and Delayed PACE (program starting 12 weeks post-TKR to 26 weeks post-TKR).

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

All

Ages

40 to 79 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • BMI between 25-45 kg/m2
  • Have a scheduled knee replacement at least 1 week away from baseline assessment
  • Obtain physician approval to participate
  • English speaking
  • willing to attend 3 in-person assessments.

Exclusion criteria

  • Have any contraindications to diet or weight loss
  • Undergoing simultaneous bilateral knee replacement or have a scheduled or anticipated knee replacement for the contralateral knee in the next 26 weeks
  • Have a mobility limiting comorbidity besides relating to TKR
  • Taking anti-obesity medications
  • Enrolled in a formal weight loss program
  • Have had or is planning to have bariatric/gastric/lapband surgery
  • Is planning to relocate out of the Chicago land area in the next 12 months.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

16 participants in 2 patient groups

PACE
Experimental group
Description:
PACE participants will begin up to 6 weeks prior to their scheduled TKR and continue until 12 weeks after their TKR. Participants will be given personalized weight, dietary, and physical activity goals. Participants will be encouraged to monitor their dietary intake and physical activity using their preferred method of self-monitoring. Participants will have regular contact with their coaches either in-person or over the telephone on a weekly or bi-weekly basis, based on preference during the first 14 weeks (from up to 6 weeks pre-op to 12 weeks post-op). Further, participants may opt to receive regular text messages or emails from coaches if they prefer. At 12 weeks, PACE participants will enter a maintenance period and not have any contact with coaches.
Treatment:
Behavioral: PACE
Delayed PACE
Experimental group
Description:
After being notified of their randomized condition at baseline (up to 6 weeks prior to surgery), Delayed PACE participants will not have contact with coaches until 12 weeks after surgery. At 12 weeks after surgery, Delayed PACE participants will be given personalized weight, dietary, and physical activity goals. Participants will be encouraged to monitor their dietary intake and physical activity using their preferred method of self-monitoring. Participants will have regular contact with their coaches either in-person or over the telephone on a weekly or bi-weekly basis, based on preference during the first 14 weeks. Further, participants may opt to receive regular text messages or emails from coaches if they prefer.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Delayed PACE

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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