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The Cherokee Study: Cherokee Health for Elderly Residents With Osteoarthritis of the Knee

Wake Forest University (WFU) logo

Wake Forest University (WFU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Osteoarthritis

Treatments

Behavioral: Diet & Exercise
Behavioral: Attention Control

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
NIH

Identifiers

NCT04946344
IRB00033618 - Cherokee
U01AR068658 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to develop and demonstrate the effectiveness of a systematic, practical, cost-effective diet-induced weight loss and exercise intervention in Cherokee, North Caroling that will recruit American Indian participants; that can reduce pain and improve other clinical outcomes in knee OA patients. This pragmatic community-based trial will determine if the investigators previous findings translate to real-world settings and will address common concerns about barriers to effectiveness/ implementation.

Full description

Obesity is a modifiable risk factor for knee osteoarthritis (OA), and weight loss is an effective non-pharmacologic treatment to reduce pain. Recently, the investigators determined that under ideal, highly controlled circumstances, a diet-induced weight loss of 10% combined with exercise was significantly better at reducing pain than either intervention alone. Compared to the investigators previous longterm weight loss and exercise trials of knee OA, the diet-induced weight loss and exercise group was twice as effective at relieving pain. Whether the investigators results can be generalized to less rigorously monitored patient cohorts is unknown. Thus the challenge the investigators now face is to provide the practical means to implement this proven treatment in the community setting. This study aims to develop and demonstrate the effectiveness of a systematic, practical, cost-effective diet-induced weight loss and exercise intervention in both urban and rural communities that can reduce pain and improve other clinical outcomes in knee OA patients.

Participants will be 30 ambulatory, community-dwelling, overweight and obese men and women who meet the American College of Rheumatology clinical criteria for knee OA. The primary aim is to determine whether a pragmatic, community-based 3-month diet-induced weight loss and exercise intervention implemented in Cherokee, North Carolina significantly decreases knee pain in overweight and obese adults with knee OA relative to an attention control group. Secondary aims will determine whether this intervention improves self-reported function, health-related quality of life, and mobility. The investigators will also establish the cost-effectiveness of this pragmatic, community-based, multimodal diet-induced weight-loss and exercise program by conducting cost-effectiveness and budgetary impact analyses using data from the current trial in a validated computer-simulated model of knee OA.

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

All

Ages

50+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • age ≥ 50
  • Knee Pain plus American College of Radiology (ACR) Criteria for Knee Osteoarthritis
  • BMI = 25 ≥ kg/m2

Exclusion criteria

  • Significant co-morbid disease that would threaten safety or impair ability to participate in interventions or testing (Blindness; Type 1 diabetes; Severe coronary artery disease)
  • Not sufficiently overweight or obese, BMI < 27 kg/m2
  • Not having knee pain
  • Inability to finish 3-month study or unlikely to be compliant (Planning to leave area > 1 month during the next 3 months; Unwilling to change eating or physical activity habits; Unwilling to discontinue pain medication use for 3 days prior to testing visit)
  • Living > 30 minutes from the intervention site
  • Age, age < 50
  • Other conditions that may prohibit the effective delivery of the intervention (Unable to provide own transportation to exercise center; Unable to read or write)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

16 participants in 2 patient groups

Diet & Exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will attend an exercise class 3 days/week for 3 months. The exercise program will consist of a 15-minute aerobic phase, a 20-minute strength training phase, a second 15-minute aerobic phase, and a 10 minute cool down phase. Participant's will also attend individual and group diet sessions. Each participant will be prescribed an individual walking prescription by the exercise leader, which will be adjusted accordingly, as each participant progresses throughout the 3 months. The exercise will be of moderate intensity. Alternate forms of aerobic exercise, such as but not limited to stationary bike, elliptical trainer, or treadmill walking, can be used in place of over-ground walking. This choice could be based on participant preference, the limitations of the exercise facility, or the participant's pain level.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Diet & Exercise
Attention Control
Active Comparator group
Description:
The attention control intervention will cover an 3 month period. There will be two face to face group meetings over the 3 months, with one meeting each at months 1 and 3; and during the other months (month 2) participants will receive a combination of text messages, emails, and phone calls based on continued monitoring of participant needs and delivered via their preferred mode of contact.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Attention Control

Trial documents
2

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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