Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Partnership Programs to Reduce Cardiovascular Disparities - Morehouse-Emory Partnership
The purpose of this study is to improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes in racial and ethnic minorities. Specifically, the study seeks to systematically characterize potential ethnic differences in obesity-related CVD by drawing upon the fields of psychology, physiology, biochemistry, nursing, and clinical medicine.
BACKGROUND:
While there has been great progress in reducing CVD morbidity and mortality in the U.S. over
the past 40 years, some minority groups have not shared fully in this progress and continue
to have lower life expectancy and higher CVD morbidity. On average, minorities have less
access to medical care, receive less aggressive care and fewer diagnostic and therapeutic
cardiac procedures, and adhere poorly to prescribed medical regimens. Thus, research to
reduce health disparities by improving CVD outcomes in minorities offers potential for a
substantial positive public heath impact. Academic medical centers and institutions capable
of carrying out such research, however, often lack access to and the trust of minority
patients. Minority patients often receive fragmented care because they lack access to
regular medical care, present to emergency departments rather than primary care physicians
for complications of an advanced chronic CVD condition, and are less likely to follow
medical regimens. Minority communities often harbor distrust of clinical research. Minority
patients report greater satisfaction when receiving care from minority providers and are
reluctant to receive treatment outside their minority healthcare serving systems.
In general, minorities have high rates of hypertension, elevated cholesterol, cigarette
smoking, obesity, metabolic syndrome, and diabetes, as well as other behavioral,
environmental, and occupational risk factors for cardiovascular diseases, such as sleep
problems - all elements that contribute to excess CVD morbidity and mortality. The causes of
minority health disparities are complex and incompletely understood. Although evidence of
genetic, biologic, and environmental factors is well documented, poor outcomes are also
attributed to under-treatment. Such under-treatment may be due to limited access to health
care or, in some cases, break-down of the medical system, or failure of the physician and/or
patient to allow for optimal health care, even when access is not impaired. The complex
interactions of behavior, socio-economic status (SES), culture, and ethnicity are important
predictors of health outcomes and sources of health disparities. Despite efforts to
elucidate genetic and environmental risk factors and to promote cardiovascular health in
high-risk populations, trends in CVD outcomes suggest that CVD health disparities continue
to widen.
The Partnerships Program to Reduce Cardiovascular Health Disparities involves collaboration
between research-intensive medical centers (RIMCs) that have a track record of NIH-supported
research and patient care and minority healthcare serving systems (MSSs) that lack a strong
research program. Each Partnership Program will: a) design and carry out multiple
interdisciplinary research projects that investigate complex biological, behavioral,and
societal factors that contribute to CVD health disparities and facilitate clinical research
within the MSS to improve CVD outcomes and reduce health disparities, and b) provide
reciprocal educational and skills development programs so that investigators will be able to
conduct research aimed at reducing cardiovascular disparities and thereby enhance research
opportunities, enrich cultural sensitivity, and improve cardiovascular research capabilities
at both institutions.
The Request for Applications for Partnership Programs to Reduce Cardiovascular Disparities
was released in September 2003. The awards were made in September 2004.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Over the past decade, there has been an explosive increase in obesity among all age groups
within the U.S. population. This epidemic is particularly problematic among African
Americans in the Southeast. Although genetic factors play a contributory role, it is
postulated that ethnic disparities in obesity and obesity-related CVD are related to a
dynamic interplay between biological factors and the behavioral response to the unique
environmental context within ethnic communities. Obesity is often associated with
perturbations in the metabolic and physiologic milieu. A cluster of obesity-related
abnormalities has been defined as the "Metabolic Syndrome". The CVD complications of obesity
appears to be related to the capacity for adipose tissue itself to generate "adipokines"
that directly predispose to insulin-resistance, endothelial dysfunction, inflammation, and
vascular disease.
The study will use state-of-the-art approaches to define potential ethnic differences in the
profile of metabolic, physiologic, and biochemical features associated with obesity as well
as the salutary responses to lifestyle modification. The program uses a multi-disciplinary
strategy to systematically characterize potential ethnic differences in obesity-related CVD
by drawing upon the fields of psychology, physiology, biochemistry, nursing, and clinical
medicine. In a thematic series of inter-related studies, the program's research plan ranges
from epidemiology studies within the ethnic communities, to patient-centered clinical trial
interventions within ethnic community practices, to the analysis of novel biomarkers of
human pathobiology. This collaborative multi-investigator team is built upon a complementary
partnership between the Morehouse School of Medicine and Emory University. This partnership
shares a joint commitment to address the striking ethnic disparities in the high-risk CVD
population. The specific aims are: 1) to define the relative influence of
psychosocial/cultural factors and biological mediators as determinants of ethnic disparities
in obesity and the metabolic syndrome in a population-based bi-racial cohort; 2) to define
the effectiveness of patient-targeted behavioral interventions to enhance the health of
African American patients with the Metabolic Syndrome in the context of community-based
clinical practices; 3) to assess the impact of innovative lifestyle intervention strategies
on conventional and novel biomarkers of vascular disease risk in African Americans; and 4)
to enhance the education/training of fellows/practitioners engaged in CVD disparities
research/practice and promote partnerships that enhance cardiovascular health within ethnic
communities.
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Observational Model: Ecologic or Community, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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