LIFT: Lifestyle Interventions For Two

Sponsor
Columbia University (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT01616147
Collaborator
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) (NIH)
210
1
2
59
3.6

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

This randomized, controlled trial is proposed to study the effect, in a cohort of racially and ethnically diverse group of overweight and obese pregnant women, of an Intensive Lifestyle Intervention (ILI) which utilize cognitive behavioral strategies to help participants achieve and maintain changes in dietary intake and physical activity habits compared to Usual Care (UC) on gestational weight gain (GWG), infant fatness, and mothers' post-delivery weight retention. The hypothesis is that the percent body fat at birth will be significantly less in offspring from ILI mothers than UC mothers.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Behavioral: Intensive Lifestyle Intervention (ILI)
  • Behavioral: Usual Care
N/A

Detailed Description

Overall body weight and weight gain during pregnancy have gone up among all women in the United States. Higher body weight of the mother at the time of the baby's conception and a greater weight gain during pregnancy are both associated with more fat in the infant and later overweight in children. Obesity in children has become a great public health problem. This study will use the new Institute of Medicine Guidelines for weight gain during pregnancy. These Guidelines are based on observations showing that women whose weight gain was within the recommended Guidelines had healthier pregnancies and better pregnancy outcomes than those who did not follow the Guidelines. It is important for researchers to understand whether a lifestyle intervention like LIFT can help women have healthier pregnancies and healthier babies. If the researchers find that a lifestyle intervention positively impacts the mothers and their babies, then the researchers can help other pregnant women have healthier pregnancies and babies as well.

This Study, The Lifestyle Intervention For Two (LIFT) Study, is part of the LIFE Moms consortium, a national project involving seven sites across the US. The purpose of the LIFE Moms consortium is to study different ways in which women who are overweight or obese can manage their body weight during pregnancy, and how this may affect them and their baby's health at birth and through the first year. As part of the LIFE Moms consortium, The LIFT Study will look how controlled weight gain during pregnancy will impact the health of the mother and her child. Researchers at Columbia University are investigating the effect of an intensive lifestyle intervention (i.e. diet and physical activity counseling). The researchers hope to positively impact not only body weight gain during pregnancy, but also positively impact infant body fatness and mother's weight loss after pregnancy. The LIFE Moms researchers are looking at whether too much weight gain in the mother will result in a leaner baby, and less retention of fat by the mother following pregnancy.

This study is a randomized controlled trial to study the effect, in a cohort of racially and ethnically diverse group of overweight and obese pregnant women, of an Intensive Lifestyle Intervention (ILI) compared to Usual Care (UC) on gestational weight gain (GWG), infant fatness, and mothers' post-delivery weight retention. Women in the ILI arm will receive intensive counseling during pregnancy and group counseling after delivery regarding behavior, nutrition, and physical activity change. Visits to counselors will occur semi-monthly and additional telephone and internet contacts will occur. The mothers' will be assessed at 14 and 36 weeks of pregnancy and at 14 weeks (range 13-15) and 52 (range 48-56) weeks post-delivery. The measurements will be anthropometry, whole body MRI, EchoMRI, and whole body plethysmography (BodPod). The infants' measurements will be anthropometry, whole body MRI, EchoMRI, and whole body plethysmography (PeaPod) for fatness 14 weeks (range 14-15) weeks and 52 (range 48-56) weeks. Mothers and children will have cardio-metabolic risk factors measured in plasma. Data will be collected regarding mothers' dietary intake and physical activity (questionnaires and accelerometry) to assist in counseling. Other data to be collected include questionnaires on quality of life, socio-economic status. Each mother will be followed during pregnancy and for a year post delivery. Each infant will be followed for a year after birth. The researchers have the ability to continue to follow these participants if further funding is forthcoming, as they are all local to the hospital's catchment area and to own physicians.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
210 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Single (Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Prevention
Official Title:
LIFT: Lifestyle Interventions For Two (Member of the LIFE Moms Consortium)
Study Start Date :
Oct 1, 2012
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Aug 31, 2017
Actual Study Completion Date :
Aug 31, 2017

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Intensive Lifestyle Intervention (ILI)

Women in the ILI arm will receive intensive counseling during pregnancy and group counseling after delivery regarding behavior, nutrition, and physical activity change. Visits to counselors will occur twice monthly with additional weekly telephone and internet contacts.

Behavioral: Intensive Lifestyle Intervention (ILI)
Women in the ILI arm will receive intensive counseling during pregnancy and group counseling after delivery regarding behavior, nutrition, and physical activity change. Visits to counselors will occur twice monthly with additional weekly telephone and internet contacts.

Active Comparator: Usual Care

Women in the usual care group will be offered group support classes approximately every 2 months during pregnancy and 3 months after pregnancy.

Behavioral: Usual Care
Women in the usual care group will be offered group support classes approximately every 2 months during pregnancy and 3 months after pregnancy.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Infant Percent Fat at Birth [Within 24 hours of birth]

    Infant % fat at birth as a continuous variable. This will be ascertained from PeaPod within 24 hours after birth.

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Mother fat mass gain 35 Weeks [35,0-35,6 weeks of pregnancy]

    Fat mass gain of mother at 35,0-35,6 weeks of pregnancy as a continuous variable.

  2. Mother fat mass gain one year postpartum [48-56 weeks postpartum]

    Mother's fat mass at 52 (range 48-56) weeks postpartum

  3. Mother's weight one-year postpartum [48-56 weeks postpartum]

    Weight of mother at 52 (range 48-56) weeks

  4. Infant % fat 14 weeks [13-15 weeks]

    Infant %fat at 14 (range 13-15) weeks. This will be ascertained from PeaPod.

  5. Infant % fat 52 weeks [48-52 weeks]

    Infant %fat 52 (range 48-56) weeks.

  6. Infant Weight 14 weeks [13-15 weeks]

    Infant weight at 14 (range 13-15) weeks.

  7. Infant weight 52 weeks [48-56 weeks]

    Infant weight at 52 (range 48-56) weeks.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
18 Years and Older
Sexes Eligible for Study:
Female
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Singleton viable pregnancy

  • Gestational age between 9,0 and 15,6

  • Body Mass Index of 25 and above

  • Age 18 and over

  • Ability to contact

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Less than 18 years old

  • Diagnosis of Diabetes or Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)> or = 6.5%

  • Known fetal anomaly

  • Planned termination of pregnancy

  • History of 3 more more consecutive first trimester miscarriages

  • Current eating disorder

  • Actively suicidal

  • Prior or planned bariatric surgery

  • Current use of metformin, systemic steroids, antipsychotic agents, anti-seizure medications, mood stabilizers, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder medications

  • Continued use of weight loss medication

  • Contraindications to aerobic exercise in pregnancy

  • Participation in another interventional study that influences weight control

  • Enrollment in this trial in a previous pregnancy

  • Intention of the participant or of the care provider for the delivery to be outside the Lifestyle Interventions For Expectant (LIFE) Moms consortium hospital

  • Participant's unwillingness or inability to commit to a 1 year follow-up of herself or her child, including planning to move away

  • Smoking

  • History of Drug and/or Alcohol Addiction

  • Chronic health problems that prohibit regular exercise or known to influence body composition

  • Other chronic disease as determined by investigators

  • Claustrophobia (only for participants who elect to have MRI)

  • Implanted metal objects that render MRI unsafe (only for participants who elect to have MRI)

  • Lack of support from primary health care provider or family members

  • Another member of the household is a study participant or staff member

  • Any other medical, psychiatric, social or behavioral factor that in the judgement of the Principal Investigator (PI) may interfere with study participation or ability to follow the intervention protocol

Contacts and Locations

Locations

Site City State Country Postal Code
1 Columbia University Medical Center New York New York United States 10032

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Columbia University
  • National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Dympna Gallagher, EdD, Columbia University

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Dympna Gallagher, Professor of Nutritional Medicine at CUMC, Columbia University
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT01616147
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • AAAO0651
  • 1U01DK094463
First Posted:
Jun 11, 2012
Last Update Posted:
Feb 1, 2019
Last Verified:
Jan 1, 2019
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
Undecided
Plan to Share IPD:
Undecided
Keywords provided by Dympna Gallagher, Professor of Nutritional Medicine at CUMC, Columbia University
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Feb 1, 2019