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UCLA Breast Cancer Survivor Health Promotion Research Study

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) logo

University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Treatments

Behavioral: Highly Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) intervention
Behavioral: Diabetes Prevention Program-based lifestyle change intervention (DPP)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05113485
B27IB3856

Details and patient eligibility

About

Pilot randomized controlled parallel group behavior change comparative effectiveness trial involves 30 breast cancer survivors interested in losing excess body fat. Both interventions include dietary + exercise prescriptions that hold promise for reducing the survivors' risk of cancer recurrence. Both interventions are consistent with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans but the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP)-based approach focuses on weight loss through calorie restriction and increased physical activity while the Highly Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) approach is intended to be a low-numeracy version of a Mediterranean-style diet and increased physical activity. The DPP approach is considered to be a high-numeracy intervention because it requires that consumers keep track of all calories consumed and expended per day and to endeavor to maintain a calorie deficit each day during the active weight loss phase. For both conditions, the 12 to 13-week intervention includes 2 virtual home visits, 2 virtual group education sessions and 7 telephone or Zoom-based coaching sessions by well-trained intervenors. Assessments occur at baseline and six months, with systemic inflammation (high sensitivity C-reactive protein) being the primary outcome measure and visceral fat being a secondary outcome. Other prespecified secondary outcomes include gut microbiota alpha-1 diversity, insulin resistance, HDL-cholesterol, daily count of highly microbiota-accessible foods, waist circumference, BMI, systolic blood pressure, ratio of fecal Proteobacteria to short chain fatty acid-generating bacteria and health-related quality of life.

Full description

Background. The human gut microbiota influences obesity status and inflammation, two major risk factors for postmenopausal breast cancer recurrence. Whether an exercise and dietary intervention designed to optimize gut microbiota composition might reduce risk for breast cancer recurrence is unknown. To improve the gut microbiota composition, the investigators propose teaching postmenopausal breast cancer survivors to allocate about 20% of their daily calorie intake to consuming a daily count of six fiber-rich, minimally processed, plant-based food choices that comply with federal MyPlate.gov diet recommendations. Preliminary data suggest that the investigators' Highly-Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) approach will yield cardiometabolic outcomes equal to or better than those achieved by the traditional Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) calorie restriction approach at 6 months follow-up. Because breast cancer recurrence risk covaries with cardiometabolic risks, the lower cardiometabolic risk of the HMAFs approach should be associated with reduced risk of breast cancer recurrence.

Hypotheses. The greater diversity of fiber-rich, minimally processed plant foods consumed in the HMAFs condition relative to the DPP condition will result in greater changes in HMAFs participants compared to DPP participants from baseline to 6 months follow-up in the following measures: (primary hypothesis) reduce high sensitivity C-reactive protein, (secondary hypotheses) reduce visceral body fat and increase alpha-1 diversity of gut microbes and increase health-related quality of life.

To test these hypotheses, the research objectives include the following specific aims: 1) Recruit a diverse sample of 30 overweight or obese postmenopausal survivors with stage I, II and IIIa breast cancer; randomly allocate them to two lifestyle change intervention conditions, 2) Obtain baseline and 6-month follow-up assessments of: low grade systemic inflammation, body composition including visceral fat estimation, cardiorespiratory fitness, inflammatory and cardiometabolic biomarkers, fecal samples, and quality of life, 3) Conduct two parallel, three-month behavior change interventions, contrasting the 6-count HMAFs approach with the traditional DPP calorie restriction approach , and 4) Use results to design a ramped-up randomized factorial trial.

If hypotheses are confirmed, the low-numeracy HMAFs approach may, for low-income survivors, be a practical alternative to traditional high-numeracy calorie restriction approaches to reducing risk of breast cancer recurrence.

Enrollment

30 estimated patients

Sex

Female

Ages

50 to 75 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. At least 6 months since breast cancer diagnosis and up to 4 years since diagnosis.
  2. Between 50 and 75 years of age.
  3. Diagnosed with localized steroid hormone receptor-positive breast cancer, up to stage IIIa.
  4. At least 6 months post chemotherapy or radiation treatment.
  5. Subjects must be in good health as determined by medical history, physical examination, and clinical laboratory measurements.
  6. No broad-spectrum antibiotic use in the last two months.
  7. Body mass index between 27 and 38 based on self-reported height and weight and between 25 and 40 based on objective assessment of height and weight.
  8. Willing to complete assessments at baseline, 3 months and 6 months follow-up

Exclusion criteria

  1. Diagnosed with metastatic breast cancer
  2. Currently undergoing chemotherapy or radiation treatment
  3. Immunoglobulin-E (IgE)-mediated food allergies, or any medical condition requiring mandatory dietary restrictions
  4. Significant cardiac, pulmonary, renal, liver or psychiatric disease.
  5. Muscular, orthopedic, or cardiovascular limitations that would prevent full participation in exercise

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

30 participants in 2 patient groups

Diabetes Prevention Program-based lifestyle change intervention (DPP)
Active Comparator group
Description:
The Diabetes Prevention Program-based lifestyle change intervention (DPP) is designed to help overweight breast cancer survivors to reduce their risk of breast cancer recurrence by reducing their excess body fat.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Diabetes Prevention Program-based lifestyle change intervention (DPP)
Highly Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) intervention
Experimental group
Description:
The Highly Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) lifestyle change intervention is designed to help overweight breast cancer survivors reduce their risk of breast cancer recurrence by reducing their elevated low-grade inflammation.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Highly Microbiota-Accessible Foods (HMAFs) intervention

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

William J. McCarthy, Ph.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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