Approximately 24% of the US adult population meet criteria for metabolic syndrome (MetS), diagnosed by a combination of abdominal obesity, elevated blood pressure, high triglyceride and low HDL-cholesterol level, and pre-diabetes. MetS quintuples the risk of diabetes, and doubles the risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), particularly heart failure. Lifestyle modification is the initial step of treatment, but few studies have demonstrated early and sustained efficacy in remission of MetS. Our preliminary studies of a lifestyle change program for patients with MetS included a 1-year of development of an intervention by an interdisciplinary team of experts in medicine and the behavioral sciences. The investigators then tested the efficacy of the intervention in a treatment-only, proof-of-concept study. The investigators achieved our goal of 50% MetS remission after 2 years, in a sample of 26 patients. This study is the second step of a research program testing an innovative bio-behavioral intervention aimed at remitting MetS through lifestyle intervention, by focusing on eating patterns, daily activity, and stress management. The overarching objective of this research program is to determine the efficacy of the ELM lifestyle intervention to achieve remission of MetS. This purpose of the current study is to prepare for a large, randomized, clinical trial by conducting a smaller clinical trial that examines the acceptability of the ELM intervention (ELM Group) as compared to two other intervention arms (ELM Classes, ELM Individual).
The 3ELM ("Eat, Love, Move") study recruits 48 patients with MetS, and provides a 6-month intervention that aims to remit MetS by promoting the long-term adoption of healthier behaviors (diet, physical activity, stress reduction). Participants in 3ELM are randomly assigned to one of the study arms ("ELM Groups", "ELM Classes", "ELM Individual"); all of which receive some type of intervention in either group, class, or individual formats. The primary aim of this project is to pilot test the acceptability of each of the study arms and the outcome measures. The study also includes outcome assessments at 3 time points: at the start of the study, and at 3, and 6 months post baseline. All study participants will receive medical care (including metabolic syndrome care) from their regular medical doctors. Study staff will track participants' use of health care and wellness services during the study after obtaining participant permission to collect this data.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
48
ELM participants are trained to portion their meals according to the "Perfect Plate" method, a modified version of the USDA's ChooseMyPlate.gov. The stress management focuses on mindful living, cognitive restructuring; the enhancement of positive emotions. The physical activity component focuses on reduction of sedentary activity (by increasing daily step counts) and moderate-to-vigorous physical activity.
ELM classes will be administered through Rush Generations program and focus on health education.
ELM Individual arm participants will receive education materials on metabolic syndrome and diet, exercise, stress reduction recommendations. The participants will be recommended to follow these guidelines and discuss/seek support from their health care provider (visits at baseline, 3 and 6 months will be recommended.
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, Illinois, United States
metabolic syndrome remission, defined as <3 of the 5 standard diagnostic criteria.
metabolic syndrome remission will be assessed by measurement of waist girth, blood pressure, fasting serum lipid and glucose levels, and the number of medications to treat blood pressure.
Time frame: 6-month change
Nutrition intake
Healthy Eating Index (HEI-2010) will be computed using data from 24-h dietary recalls, conducted on nonconsecutive days, including one weekend day, using the Nutrition Data System for Research (NDSR).128 The HEI-2010 is a quantifiable method of assessing the adherence to Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
Time frame: Baseline, and 6 months
Accelerometry
Accelerometry (Actigraph) is the gold standard objective method for daily activity data collection. Standard methods for equipment programming and data reduction, supplemented by activity and sleep log will be used to calculate minutes/week of moderate/vigorous activity, sedentary activity, sleep, and accelerometer step counts.
Time frame: At baseline and 6 months
International Physical Activity Questionnaire (IPAQ)
Measures engagement in physical activity
Time frame: At baseline and 6 months
Perceived Stress Scale
a 10-item questionnaire that measures stress
Time frame: At baseline, 3, and 6 months
Weight
Weight will be measured using stationary scale per standardized protocol.
Time frame: At baseline, 3, and 6 months
A1c
A plasma sample will be collected to measure HbA1c.
Time frame: At baseline and 6 months
Credibility and expectancies questionnaire (CEQ)
A 4-item questionnaire measures participants acceptability ratings - specifically whether they think the treatments are credible and if they think they will help them with their health goals.
Time frame: At baseline, 3, and 6 months
Vitality Index
will be tracked using a 4 item subscale of Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) 36-Item Short Form Health survey that measures perceived energy and fatigue within the last 30 days.
Time frame: At baseline, 3, and 6 months
Continuous metabolic syndrome score
calculated as a sum of z-scores of the individual 5 MetS components using reported methodology from other clinical trials. This MetS research tool has methodological advantage accounting for severity of MetS.
Time frame: At baseline, 3, and 6 months
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