Optimizing Telehealth-delivery of a Weight Loss Intervention in Older Adults

Sponsor
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT06044571
Collaborator
National Institute on Aging (NIA) (NIH)
180
1
10
48
3.8

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

This study seeks to answer the fundamental questions of which initial, first-line weight loss intervention should be offered to older adults with obesity and multiple chronic conditions and how to address the high non-response rates observed with most conventional strategies. A sequential, multiple assignment, randomized trial (SMART) design will permit the evaluation of treatment combinations that maximize weight loss and will provide data on constructing a future tailored, adaptive intervention. If successful, these findings will identify interventions that could markedly improve health and quality of life of these older adults, reduce long-term disability, and lower healthcare costs

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Prescriptive
  • Behavioral: Behavioral
N/A

Detailed Description

Purpose: Consistent with the research priorities of the National Institute on Aging, this research protocol will investigate the optimal intervention sequence to achieve weight loss in older adults with obesity and more than 2 chronic conditions, termed multiple chronic conditions (MCC). To this end, the specific aims are to: 1) test the superiority of an initial prescriptive or behavioral intervention using an adaptive strategy for early non-responders; 2) assess the patterns of initial weight loss and compare strategies for non-responders using an adaptive strategy; and 3) examine the cost-effectiveness from a societal perspective for maintaining weight loss of the proposed sequences at 78 weeks (26 weeks post-intervention completion).

Procedures (methods): The investigators will conduct a 52-week, two-stage, Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial (SMART) enrolling 180 older adults with obesity and MCC to compare two weight loss interventions: 1) a prescriptively-focused, medically-tailored, weight loss intervention(prescriptive), or 2) a behaviorally-focused, health coaching intervention (behavioral). Consistent with a SMART design, at 8 weeks, the investigators will randomize early non-responders (weight loss of < 2.5%) to (a) an increased frequency of sessions of the original assignment; (b) a combination of prescriptive and behavioral interventions; or (c) switching to either a prescriptive, medically-tailored model (or vice versa).

Aim 1 - Efficacy Test the superiority of an initial prescriptive vs. behavioral intervention on the differences in weight loss (primary outcome) and secondary outcomes, using an adaptive strategy for early non-responders in a 52-week, telehealth-based SMART. At 52-weeks, percent weight loss (primary outcome) will be greater among patients initially randomized to a prescriptive intervention, as will global health and physical function, anthropometry, behavioral treatment targets and risk factors, and clinical indices (secondary outcomes).

Aim 2 - Precision Medicine Assess the patterns of initial weight loss and compare strategies for non-responders to weight loss (increasing number of sessions, combined prescriptive and behavioral, or switching initial treatment strategies [prescriptive to behavioral, or behavioral to prescriptive]). The investigators will estimate an adaptive strategy (dynamic treatment regime) to give the right intervention to the right participant. The investigators hypothesize that this dynamic regime will lead to a better outcome, on average, compared to the best non-adaptive (fixed) regime

Aim 3 - Cost-Effectiveness Examine the cost-effectiveness from a societal perspective at 78-weeks (26 weeks post-intervention completion). For the initial, first-line interventions, the investigators will estimate the incremental cost per percent weight change and assess secondary outcomes of the incremental cost for maintaining at least a 5% weight loss, and quality-adjusted life years. The investigators will also model the cost-effectiveness of the precision medicine approach predicted to have the greatest individualized likelihood of weight loss response.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
180 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Sequential Assignment
Intervention Model Description:
A single site two-stage, Phase III clinical trial using a SMART design, will assess the superiority between two first-line strategies (prescriptive, behavioral) on percent weight loss at 52 weeksA single site two-stage, Phase III clinical trial using a SMART design, will assess the superiority between two first-line strategies (prescriptive, behavioral) on percent weight loss at 52 weeks
Masking:
Double (Participant, Care Provider)
Masking Description:
This trial will have a single-masked design, so the team assessing study outcomes is masked to intervention assignment. Participants will be asked not to reveal their assignment. Arm assignment cannot be blinded due to the study's design. The assessment team will schedule assessments to minimize contact with the intervention team to maintain separation. Data entry and analysis will be blinded to the study investigators, besides Kosorok and team. Assessments will be done at different times and in separate areas at the study site. The intervention setting for participants will be in their homes. To enhance continued masking, participants will be asked not to disclose their assigned group and not to discuss their intervention arms during assessment sessions. Assessment of compliance to the intervention will be performed by the intervention team and not by the outcome assessment team. The investigators will be blinded to data analysis, collection, and study arms.
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
Optimizing Telehealth-delivery of a Weight Loss Intervention in Older Adults With Multiple Chronic Conditions: A Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Feb 1, 2024
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Jan 31, 2028
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Jan 31, 2028

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Active Comparator: Prescriptive

A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals- Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs) will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs) will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapy: 40 min).

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Active Comparator: Behavioral

Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine. Conceptual model targets include: barrier identification: problem-solving to identify and address barriers to meet goals self-regulation: a focus on self-monitoring and behavior goals with feedback autonomous motivation: self-selecting goals, motivational interviewing use, and creating plans; and (d) self-efficacy: learning from group experiences, verbal persuasion, and encouraging pursuit of goals in the face of setbacks.

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Experimental: Responders to Prescriptive- Continue Prescriptive

The prescriptive strategy will continue among participants who responded to this intervention well initially, meaning that participants who lost greater than or equal to 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight using the prescriptive intervention. Participants will continue their diet and exercise programs that were initially tailored to them.

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Experimental: Non-responders to Prescriptive- Switch to Behavioral

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight initially will be randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants switch first-line treatment from a prescriptive strategy to the alternative (behavioral) as participants may need motivation or problem-solving.

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Experimental: Non-responders to Prescriptive- Increased Number of Contacts

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight early on will be re-randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants will have an increasing Intensification by increasing the number of first-line strategy sessions- increased contacts predict weight loss, and improve health behaviors and accountability.

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Experimental: Non-responders to Prescriptive- Combination of Prescriptive and Behavioral

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight early on will be re-randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants will have a combined prescriptive and behavioral intervention- three guideline-advised strategies that may be synergistic in a subset of participants requiring knowledge, and needing goal setting and problem-solving skills. This approach is available in multispecialty, tertiary care obesity clinics.

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Experimental: Responders to Behavioral- Continue Behavioral

The behavioral strategy will continue among participants who responded to this intervention well initially, meaning that participants who lost greater than or equal to 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight using the behavioral intervention.

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Experimental: Non-responders to Behavioral- Switch to Prescriptive

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight early on will be re-randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants switch first-line treatment strategy to the alternative (prescriptive) as participants may need knowledge to support adherence.

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Experimental: Non-responders to Behavioral- Increased Number of Contacts

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight early on will be re-randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants will have an increasing number of first-line strategy (behavioral) sessions- increased contacts predict weight loss, and improve health behaviors and accountability.

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Experimental: Non-responders to Behavioral- Combination of Prescriptive and Behavioral

Participants who lost less than 2.5 percent (%) of their body weight early on will be re-randomized to a different type of intervention. One possibility could be that participants will have a combined prescriptive and behavioral intervention - three guideline-advised strategies that may be synergistic in a subset of participants requiring knowledge, and needing goal setting and problem-solving skills. This approach is available in multispecialty, tertiary care obesity clinics.

Other: Prescriptive
Prescriptive A diet and exercise prescription individually tailored to each participant's multiple chronic health conditions will provide concrete advice with less autonomy, and will minimize risks of physiologic changes due to weight loss (hypoglycemia, hypotension, muscle loss). Licensed, trained professionals, Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs), will introduce clinical reasoning, knowledge, and experience, assess biological adaptations to weight loss, modify prescriptions based on changing medical needs, and provide real-time and asynchronous guidance. Registered Dietician Nutritionists (RDNs) and Physical Therapists (PTs)will deliver group and individual, live sessions to the home by telemedicine. Sessions will last 60-min (Registered Dietician Nutritionist: 20 min; Physical Therapist: 40 min).

Behavioral: Behavioral
Behavioral Health coaches have a bachelor's degree and take a 6-8-week certification program. Behavioral Health coaches will use a structured manual involving evidence-based behavior change techniques (problem-solving, self-regulation, motivation). Group and individual sessions will be via telemedicine.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Change in weight from baseline [8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Absolute change in weight percentage (%) over time from baseline to 52-weeks. Weight will be objectively measured on a digital scale. A negative number will indicate weight loss.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Change in Patient reported outcomes measurement information systems (PROMIS)- Global health [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    PROMIS (Patient Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System) gauges physical, mental, and social aspects of health (5-point scale). A mean standardized score for the population is 50; 10 points indicate one standard deviation. Higher scores indicate better health. Range (0-100)

  2. Change in Patient reported outcomes measurement information systems (PROMIS)- Physical function [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Self-reported physical function (5-point scale) measure that is a responsive measure evaluating mobility and activities of daily living; A mean standardized score for the population is 50; 10 points indicate one standard deviation. Higher scores indicate better health. Range (0-100)

  3. Change in 30-second sit-to-stand from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    This is a construct of physical function that predicts falls and disability and is sensitive to change. The 30-second sit-to-stand test is administered using a folding chair without arms and involves recording the number of stands from a seated position a person can complete in 30 seconds. Change in 30-s sit-to-stand in repetitions over time will be reported from baseline to 78-weeks. An improvement in repetitions will represent an improvement of physical function. The continuous value correlates with quadriceps Minimal Clinically Important Difference (2.0 repetitions)

  4. Change in grip strength from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    An objective measure that relates to upper and lower extremity strength, and predicts mobility disability. Using a Jamar dynamometer, change in participant's maximal grip strength measurement in kilograms from baseline. Absolute change in grip strength in kilograms over time will be reported from baseline to 78-weeks. An increase in kilograms represented on the device will represent an improvement of physical function. No cutoffs will be used for this - the research team will be use the continuous value.

  5. Change in gait speed from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Gait speed (measured in meters/second or m/s) measures how long it takes a person to travel a given distance. It is A simple, clinical measure of objective physical function that reflects health and functional status and predicts falls, disability, and mortality. Gait Speed is measured using the time in seconds it takes a participant to complete a 4 meter course while walking at a usual pace. Gait speed is measured as distance (meters) ÷ time (seconds). An absolute change in gait speed will be the difference from follow-up measures and baseline. An improvement in gait speed represents an improvement in physical function. Units are meters/second. Normal >1.2m/s.

  6. Change in 6-minute walk from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A measure of aerobic endurance (normal distance 400-700m) that is a surrogate for submaximal aerobic/cardiovascular fitness. Clinically significant change ranges between 14-30.5 m.

  7. Change in waist circumference from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Absolute change in waist circumference in centimeters (cm) over time from baseline. Waist circumference will be measured objectively using a tape measure. A negative number will indicate a loss in waist circumference

  8. Change in hip circumference from baseline [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Absolute change in hip circumference in centimeters (cm) over time from baseline. Hip circumference will be measured objectively using a tape measure. A negative number will indicate a loss of hip circumference

  9. Proportion with greater than or equal to 5% weight loss [8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The proportion achieving a clinically significant 5% weight loss

  10. Change in % body fat from baseline [0, 26, 52 weeks]

    Dual x-ray absorptiometry (General Electric Lunar iDXA) software will assess total body fat % (percent). A reduction in the percentage of total body fat is suggestive of improvements in health related outcomes.

  11. Change in volume of visceral fat from baseline [0, 26, 52 weeks]

    Dual x-ray absorptiometry (General Electric Lunar iDXA) software will assess visceral fat mass % (percent). A reduction in visceral fat volume is suggestive of improvements in health related outcomes.

  12. Change in appendicular lean mass from baseline [0, 26, 52 weeks]

    Dual x-ray absorptiometry (General Electric Lunar iDXA) software will assess percent (%) lean mass (total, segmental). A reduction in lean mass percentage is suggestive of worsening of health related outcomes.

  13. Late-life function and disability instrument [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78]

    Self-reported 32-item physical function measure consisting of function and life-task items that correlate with gait speed and lower-limb function. A 2-point difference is clinically significant. Range, (scaled score, 0-100). Higher scores indicate better performance and less limitation than lower scores.

  14. Change in Pittsburgh Fatigability questionnaire [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The 15-item Pittsburgh Fatigability Scale measures perceived fatigue of sedentary, social, lifestyle and physical activities (light-high intensity, 0-50 scale). Cutoff of ≥15 and ≥13 indicate higher physical and mental fatigue that may lead to reduced performance or restricted activity. Higher scores indicate greater perceived physical or mental fatigability. A reduction in the absolute change in score suggests improvements in fatigue.

  15. Change in Self-efficacy- exercise [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The Self-Efficacy for Exercise Scale (range 0-90) is based on the Social Cognitive Theory (higher scores mean higher self-efficacy for initiating/maintaining exercise). A positive change in self-efficacy reflects better outcomes, and a negative change reflects worse outcomes.

  16. Change in Self-efficacy- nutrition [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The 8-item Weight-Efficacy Lifestyle Short Form measures confidence in adopting and maintaining weight loss behaviors. A 15-point change was related to a 25% weight loss in bariatric surgery participants. Range (0-80). A positive change in self-efficacy reflects better outcomes, and a negative change reflects worse outcomes.

  17. Change in Self-efficacy- technology [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A 10-item Likert scale (1-10) will measure daily Technology Self-Efficacy (higher score means higher self-efficacy). Range (0-100)

  18. Change in Goal setting- exercise [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Only conducted in the Behavioral arms. This is a Likert Scale question, where answers can range from 1-10, with higher scores indicating better goal setting abilities

  19. Change in Goal setting- nutrition [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Only conducted in the Behavioral arms. This is a Likert Scale questionnaire, where answers can range from 1-10, with higher scores indicating better goal setting abilities.

  20. Change in Goal setting- technology [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Only conducted in the Behavioral arms. This is a Likert Scale questionnaire, where answers can range from 1-10, with higher scores indicating better goal setting abilities.

  21. Change in social support for diet [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A validated scale that assesses friends/family support for engaging in dietary changes. Higher scores indicate higher social support. Each are scored for family and friends separately (range 0-100).

  22. Change in social support for exercise [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A validated scale that assesses friends/family support for engaging in dietary exercises. Higher scores indicate higher social support. Each are scored for family and friends separately (range 0-60).

  23. Treatment self-regulation: diet [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A validated 15-item, 7-point scale (range 0-100) reflecting autonomous motivation and controlled motivation. Higher scores indicate better outcomes.

  24. Treatment self-regulation: exercise [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    A validated 15-item, 7-point scale (range 0-100) reflecting autonomous motivation and controlled motivation. Higher scores indicate better outcomes.

  25. Change in caloric intake [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Using the Automated Self-Administered 24-hour Dietary Assessment (ASA-24), the investigators will measure caloric intake per day. Change measured in the difference between calories per day at baseline, throughout study, and follow-up assessment. This is an automated food recall that assess caloric intake. A change in caloric intake will be reported in kcal per day. Reduction in caloric input suggests reduced calorie intake.

  26. Physical activity: community healthy activities model program for seniors [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    This questionnaire, known as CHAMPS (community healthy activities model program for seniors), will assess activity levels and types (weekly caloric expenditure; frequency of activities) and their changes. The investigators will use a standardized algorithm to assess low, moderate, vigorous activity and caloric output

  27. Patient activation measure [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Patient Activation Measure assesses knowledge, skills & confidence for managing health revealing insights into motivators, behaviors, attitudes & outcomes (4 points each; score 0-100, low to high) 0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks

  28. Fitbit use- Wear/non-wear time [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Measurement using Fitbit data of the time spent during the day wearing the device.

  29. Fitbit use- activity/steps [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    Evaluation using Fitbit data of the average number of steps (and total number to that point) a participant has engaged in

  30. Attendance [78 weeks]

    Feasibility of study procedures measured as the mean attendance rate of all participants. Participant attendance rate = (total # of visits attended / total # of visits scheduled) x 100. There are no cut-off scores for interpretation. Higher scores indicate higher feasibility

  31. Acceptability of Study Intervention [78 weeks]

    Measured through an end of study satisfaction survey, acceptability is measured on a 10 point Likert scale conducted on all participants at 78-weeks. This is rated on a 1 (strongly disagree) to 10 (strongly agree) survey.

  32. Percent of participants rating the intervention as acceptable [78 weeks]

    Conducted on all participants using a 1-5 Likert scale to assess appropriateness of the study intervention measures using the following: completely disagree, disagree, neither agree or disagree, agree, completely agree. Acceptability is reported as Agree or Completely Agree responses. Percent is calculated as total number of participants rating as agree or complete agree divided by the number of total participants.

  33. Telehealth satisfaction [52, 78 weeks]

    A end-of-study questionnaire that assesses patient satisfaction regarding the use of Telehealth (Likert scale, 1-10). Range 0-100. Higher scores indicate better outcomes.

  34. Telehealth usability survey [52 weeks]

    A single item Likert scale (1-10) will measure usefulness, ease of use, effectiveness, reliability & satisfaction of telemedicine. This will be measured at the conclusion of the study intervention. Range 0-100. Higher scores indicate better outcomes.

  35. Change in systolic blood pressure [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values-measured in mmHg (millimeters of mercury)- a value of 5mmHg (millimeters of mercury) is clinically significant

  36. Change in diastolic blood pressure [0, 8, 16, 26, 52, 78 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values (measured in mmHg)- a value of 5mmHg (millimeters of mercury) is clinically significant

  37. Change in low density lipoprotein blood levels [0, 8, 52 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values measured in mg/dL (milligrams per deciliter) using a lipid panel. Levels >100mg/dL would be potentially clinically actionable. 0, 8, 52 weeks

  38. Change in high density lipoprotein blood levels [0, 8, 52 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values measured in mg/dL (milligrams per deciliter) using a lipid panel

  39. Change in total cholesterol blood levels [0, 8, 52 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values measured in mg/dL (milligrams per deciliter) using a lipid panel

  40. Change in glucose blood levels [0, 8, 52 weeks]

    The difference between baseline and follow-up values, units in mg/dL (milligrams per deciliter). A glucose level >126mg/dL is considered diabetic.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
65 Years to 85 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • English-speaking, community-dwelling adults ages 65-85 (unclear benefits of weight loss if >85 years)

  • Obesity (Body mass index [BMI] ≥30kg/m^2;

  • ≥2 of the 21 Medicare-defined chronic conditions;

  • Documented change within 12-weeks of enrollment of a <5% weight change;

  • Callahan Cognitive screen questionnaire score ≥2 (ability to consent);

  • Older Americans Resources & Services ≥6 (disability);

  • readiness to change11 ≥6/10;

  • medical clearance by primary care provider.

Exclusion Criteria:
  • documented diagnosis in the electronic health record of dementia;

  • documented diagnosis in the electronic health record of bariatric surgery in the past;

  • untreated psychiatric, life-threatening, or terminal illness;

  • nursing home or hospital admission in past three months

  • advanced heart, liver, renal failure, non-skin cancer; weight loss contraindication;

  • anti-obesity medications;

  • elective surgery in next six months;

  • recent (<1 month) Coronavirus Disease, 2019 (COVID-19) infection;

  • current or past participation (in the past 12 months) in another weight-loss study.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 UNC Center for Aging and Health Chapel Hill North Carolina United States 27599

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  • National Institute on Aging (NIA)

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: John Batsis, MD, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT06044571
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 23-1146
  • 1R01AG077163-01A1
First Posted:
Sep 21, 2023
Last Update Posted:
Sep 21, 2023
Last Verified:
Sep 1, 2023
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Sep 21, 2023