Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
PACE-iDP: An Intervention for Youth at Risk for Diabetes
This randomized control study (sponsored by the NIH, NIDDK) is aimed at reducing BMI in overweight adolescents at risk for the development of type 2 diabetes. The study will examine whether an integrated primary care, web and cell-phone-based intervention can produce initial and sustained improvements in anthropometric, behavioral, metabolic, and physiological outcomes in overweight adolescents. The primary goal is to reduce BMI (Body Mass Index)in overweight adolescents.
Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (DM) is a common disease that plagues over 16 million adults in the
United States (American Diabetes Association [ADA], 2002). Over the past decade, the number
of adults diagnosed with diabetes has risen dramatically. The high rates of type 2 diabetes
have been associated with the simultaneously rapid increase in the prevalence of obesity,
and diminished levels of physical activity in the population (Wing, 2001).
Type 2 diabetes is increasing in children and adolescents in the U.S. and worldwide (ADA,
2000). Several studies have demonstrated higher risk of type 2 diabetes in African-American,
Hispanic, and American Indian children and adolescents (Glaser, 1997; Dean, 1992;
Pinhas-Hamiel, 1996; Rosenbloom, 1999). Other characteristics, or risk factors, that may be
used to identify children at high-risk for developing type 2 diabetes include obesity,
family history, and physiologic manifestations of insulin resistance (ADA, 2000). Up to 85%
of children with type 2 diabetes are overweight or obese at diagnosis. A majority of
children with type 2 diabetes have at least one parent or first-degree relative with type 2
diabetes. Physiologic findings of insulin resistance that are present in large percentages
of children with type 2 diabetes include acanthosis nigricans, polycystic ovarian syndrome,
hypertension and lipid disorders (ADA, 2000). Among US children, the mean age at diagnosis
of type 2 diabetes is between 12 and 14 years (Moran, 1999; Goran MI, 2001).
Obesity is commonly found in children with type 2 diabetes, and the increasing incidence of
children with type 2 diabetes has been attributed to the growing problem of pediatric
overweight and obesity (Fagot-Camapagna, et.al, 2000). It is often hypothesized that an
industrialized, or "Westernized" lifestyle of excessive energy intake and sedentary behavior
partially explains the recent emergence of type 2 diabetes and obesity in youth (Hill &
Peters, 1998; Koplan & Dietz, 2000). Evidence that the number of years being obese is
positively correlated with diabetes risk (Everhart, 1992), supports intervening in
adolescence to minimize the number of years of obesity.
Obesity and physical inactivity are thought to be the main modifiable determinants of this
disease, and interventions targeting diet and physical activity have been surprisingly
effective in preventing diabetes in high-risk adults (Tuomilehto, 2001; NIDDK, 2001). There
are no published studies that examine the efficacy of similar lifestyle interventions aimed
at children and adolescents. Our rationale for intervening on these behaviors with high-risk
adolescents is based on these findings, as well as the following: (a) the majority of
adolescents do not meet current guidelines for physical activity and nutrition and (b) there
is a steep age-related decline in physical activity that peaks in the teen years. In its
March 2000 Consensus Statement of Type 2 Diabetes In Children and Adolescents, the ADA
expert panel stated that, "Primary care providers have an obligation to encourage lifestyle
modifications that might delay or prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes in children at high
risk. Lifestyle interventions focusing on weight management and increasing physical activity
should be promoted in all children at high risk for the development of type 2 diabetes."
(ADA, 2000).
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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