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Respiratory Effects of Obesity in Children

The University of Texas System (UT) logo

The University of Texas System (UT)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Childhood Obesity

Treatments

Other: 1 year follow-up testing

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03376880
STU 052012-076

Details and patient eligibility

About

In obese children, excess fat on the thorax exerts an unfavorable burden on the respiratory system, particularly during exercise; however, it is unclear if this burden reduces exercise tolerance, provokes dyspnea on exertion, or contributes to respiratory symptoms that could be misdiagnosed as asthma, placing obese children at risk of unnecessary treatment and potentially a reluctance to exercise explaining reports of low physical activity and fitness levels, which are counterproductive to weight loss. The investigators will examine the respiratory effects of obesity in prepubescent boys and girls, including those with respiratory symptoms misdiagnosed as asthma, before and after 1) a program of weight loss and regular exercise and 2) continued weight gain as compared with prepubescent normal weight boys and girls before and after 1 year. These results will have broad and immediate clinical impact on the care of obese children, especially those with respiratory symptoms misdiagnosed as asthma, and the results could alter interventional approaches for preventing and treating childhood obesity.

Full description

In obese children, excess fat exerts an unfavorable burden on the respiratory system, particularly during exercise, potentially reducing exercise tolerance and leading to DOE (dyspnea on exertion), which could explain reports of low physical activity and fitness levels in obese children. The investigators propose that most of the respiratory effects in obese children are the result of low lung volume breathing, i.e., a reduction in functional residual capacity (FRC) at rest, and end-expiratory lung volume (EELV) during exercise.

The overall objective of this application is to investigate the respiratory effects of obesity in prepubescent children, including obese children with respiratory symptoms misdiagnosed as asthma, before and after 1) a program of weight loss and regular exercise and 2) continued weight gain as compared with normal weight children before and after 1 yr. The investigative approach will be to examine respiratory function, exercise tolerance, and dyspnea on exertion (DOE) in prepubescent obese boys and girls, including those misdiagnosed with asthma (i.e., asthma not confirmed by lung function tests), before and after 1) weight loss (or an equivalent reduction in BMI percentile) and regular exercise and 2) continued weight gain (or an increase in BMI percentile) as compared with prepubescent normal weight boys and girls before and after a control period of 1 yr.

Specific Aims: The following hypotheses will be tested in obese children as compared with normal weight children:

Aim 1) Obesity will decrease respiratory function but to a greater extent in obese children misdiagnosed with asthma as evidenced by altered pulmonary function and breathing mechanics at rest; Aim 2) Obesity will decrease exercise tolerance (as evidenced by peak maximum oxygen uptake (VO2) in ml/min/kg, i.e., physical fitness), but not cardiorespiratory fitness (as evidenced by peak VO2 in % of predicted based on ideal body wt), except in obese children misdiagnosed with asthma where both may be reduced during graded cycle ergometry; Aim 3) Obesity will increase DOE but to a greater extent in obese children misdiagnosed with asthma as evidenced by increased ratings of perceived breathlessness during constant load exercise cycling; and Aim 4) Weight loss and regular exercise will improve respiratory function, exercise tolerance, and DOE in obese children, including those misdiagnosed with asthma, while continued weight gain will worsen respiratory function, exercise tolerance, and DOE in obese children, including those misdiagnosed with asthma, as compared with normal weight children before and after 1 yr.

The long-term objective is to investigate the effects of obesity on respiratory function, exercise tolerance, and DOE, examine obesity-related respiratory symptoms misdiagnosed as asthma in obese children, and provide novel results that could alter interventional approaches for preventing obesity and treating obesity in obese children. Thus, these results will have broad and immediate clinical impact on the care of obese children, especially those with respiratory symptoms misdiagnosed as asthma.

Enrollment

123 patients

Sex

All

Ages

8 to 12 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Otherwise healthy with normal lung function; prepubescent (Tanner equal to or less than 3); age and gender specific BMI > 95th percentile, but less than 150% of the 95th percentile based on the CDC standards or age and gender specific BMI between the 16th and 84th percentile based on the Center for Disease Control (CDC) standards; and ability to perform pulmonary and exercise test accurately.

Exclusion criteria

  • Children with significant diseases other than obesity or shortness of breath on exertion will be excluded. Subjects participating in regular conditioning-type vigorous exercise two times or more per week will be excluded (i.e., sports training). Children who are non-English speaking will be excluded from the study because the tests performed are very effort dependent, detailed, and require technical communication between the staff and the child.

Trial design

123 participants in 6 patient groups

Obese Boys
Description:
Obese boys group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI \> 95th percentile, which will be expressed as a percentage above the 95th percentile \< 150% of the 95th percentile.
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing
Obese Girls
Description:
Obese girls group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI \> 95th percentile, which will be expressed as a percentage above the 95th percentile \< 150% of the 95th percentile.
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing
Normal Weight Boys
Description:
Normal weight boys group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI between 16th and 84th percentile.
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing
Normal Weight Girls
Description:
Normal weight girls group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI between 16th and 84th percentile.
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing
Obese Boys Misdiagnosed with Asthma
Description:
Obese boys group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI \> 95th percentile, which will be expressed as a percentage above the 95th percentile \< 150% of the 95th percentile.This group will have a prior diagnosis of asthma without confirmation by lung function testing.The absence of asthma will be confirmed by a negative response (\<10% increase in FEV1) to spirometry before and after bronchodilator (and on visit 2 by a negative bronchial challenge test \[\<10% decrease in FEV1\]; i.e., EVH).
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing
Obese Girls Misdiagnosed with Asthma
Description:
Obese girls group defined by a Tanner score ≤ 3 in 8-12 yr olds with a BMI \> 95th percentile, which will be expressed as a percentage above the 95th percentile \< 150% of the 95th percentile.This group will have a prior diagnosis of asthma without confirmation by lung function testing.The absence of asthma will be confirmed by a negative response (\<10% increase in FEV1) to spirometry before and after bronchodilator (and on visit 2 by a negative bronchial challenge test \[\<10% decrease in FEV1\]; i.e., EVH).
Treatment:
Other: 1 year follow-up testing

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jessica Alcala; Raksa Moran

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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