Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Feasibility, Acceptability and Preliminary Effectiveness of an Online Lifestyle Intervention for Healthy Weight Management and Improved Quality of Life in Breast Cancer Survivors
Obesity presents serious psychological and physical consequences for breast cancer survivors, including diminished quality of life, poorer prognosis and increased mortality. As such, there is a great need to develop strategies for these women to maintain optimal body weight. Diet and exercise have been shown to lead to successful weight loss among this population but these effects are seldom sustained, plausibly because these efforts alone overlook less obvious, but equally important, psychosocial factors that can interfere with prolonged progress. This study will implement a group-based intervention addressing diet and exercise along with other psychosocial issues related to survivorship such as depression, fatigue, body image and social support. Based on the growing popularity and benefits of computer-based health care, including convenience and anonymity, this intervention will also be offered online, representing the first of its kind. It is hypothesized that the intervention will be feasible to implement and acceptable to its participants. It is also hypothesized that the intervention will yield meaningful and sustained changes in body weight, body mass index, waist circumference (primary outcomes), as well as mental well-being, quality of life, and body image (secondary outcomes). This research has the ability to improve the long-term health of breast cancer survivors by incorporating psychosocial interventions into standard medical care practices and has the potential to increase accessibility of these services using online technology.
Breast cancer (BC) is one of the most common types of cancer in Canadian women, and although
the mortality rate is decreasing, there remain numerous challenges for survivorship. Among
the most prevalent yet less commonly discussed post-treatment concerns, is substantial weight
gain, with approximately 70% of women being overweight at diagnosis and additional weight
gain often resulting from treatment. Obesity has serious psychological and physical
implications for both pre- and post-menopausal BC survivors; in addition to compromising body
image and QoL, it increases risk for recurrence and mortality. Specifically, increased fat
results in greater production of estrogen, insulin, leptin and pro-inflammatory cytokines,
and lesser production of sex hormone binding globulin, all of which have been linked to the
promotion of BC and tumor growth. As such, the development of strategies for the promotion
and maintenance of optimal body mass has become a primary focus for BC survivorship.
Trials of lifestyle interventions for this population are in their early stages and have
primarily included modification of diet alone, exercise alone, or both. Results have been
mixed, especially regarding the effects of dietary change alone but generally support the
benefits of exercise and combined diet and exercise on weight loss and improved QoL in cancer
survivors. However, despite indications that diet and exercise interventions lead to
improvements in physical health and mental health, there remains a lack of consistent
evidence that these gains are maintained long-term. As such, there is a need for more
systematic follow-up of these interventions to determine their potential to produce enduring
effects as well as for development and refinement of techniques that improve long-term weight
management.
Beyond developing effective services, a direction for future research should include outreach
to underserved populations. Rural BC survivors represent one group, in particular, with
limited access to healthy lifestyle interventions, and who could benefit greatly from
participation. Compared to their urban counterparts, these women are less likely to have
timely diagnostic biopsies and receive optimal treatment, and are diagnosed later, at more
advanced stages when prognosis is less favourable. They are also more likely to be obese, be
less physically active, have poor eating habits, experience psychological distress, and have
less access to mental health resources, placing them at heightened risk for weight gain.
Researchers and health care providers have a responsibility to develop ways of redressing
such health disparities and helping these particularly vulnerable women make lasting changes
to their overall health and QoL.
Society's recent movement toward "eHealth", which refers to "the use of emerging information
and communication technology, especially the Internet, to improve or enable health and health
care", introduces an exciting opportunity to increase availability of health care to BC
survivors. Numerous eHealth diet and exercise interventions have been evaluated using
community samples and have generally yielded mixed findings along with recommendations for
refinement of future programs and more rigorous evaluation. Only one online community
intervention has been in group-format, and to the investigators knowledge, no online,
group-based lifestyle intervention has yet been developed specifically for BC survivors.
Given the potential for broader delivery of health care services via the Internet, research
surrounding the value of computer-based lifestyle interventions is especially warranted.
Present Study
Firstly, while trials to date demonstrate that diet and exercise interventions lead to
improvements in physical and mental health, there remains a lack of consistent evidence that
these gains are maintained long-term. Arguably, programs that focus primarily on modifying
nutrition and/or physical activity render only short-term effects because they fail to
address more subtle, but ingrained, psychosocial factors that interfere with sustained
progress. This project will develop and evaluate a group-based lifestyle intervention that
incorporates diet and exercise strategies along with education of issues more broadly related
to healthy lifestyle in the context of BC survivorship such as depression, fatigue, body
image, and social support. The program will be developed by an interdisciplinary team of
clinicians/researchers (oncologist, nurse, dietician, physiotherapist and senior
psychologist), and grounded in Systems and Self-Determination Theory, which recognize one's
motivation and self-efficacy as being the multi-determined product of interactions between
personal, social, and environmental factors; as such, this program goes beyond behavioural
diet and exercise modification by incorporating self-monitoring, motivational interviewing,
professional knowledge, and peer feedback.
Secondly, despite growing evidence for the efficacy of interactive computer-based programs
aimed at behaviour change and the associated advantages (e.g., convenience, accessibility,
anonymity), there are no such interventions to support weight loss and sustained management
for BC survivors. This project aims to fill this gap in health care by developing and
evaluating the first online, group-based lifestyle intervention for BC survivors.
Objectives. The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of
an online group-based lifestyle intervention for BC survivors. Qualitative data from the
post-treatment interviews, and written responses from the treatment satisfaction survey were
analyzed using thematic analysis to investigate this aim. A secondary aim is to evaluate the
short- and longer-term effects of this healthy lifestyle intervention on participants' (1)
physical (weight, BMI, waist circumference,) (2) behavioural (eating and physical activity
habits) and (3) psychosocial well-being (quality of life, body image). This secondary aim was
evaluated by comparing participants' scores on these measures prior to participating in the
intervention, to their scores immediately following treatment, six months following
treatment, and 12-months following treatment.
Primary aim hypotheses. It is hypothesized that this program is feasible to implement, as
demonstrated by acceptable rates of attrition, homework completion and discussion board
posting. It is also hypothesized that this program is acceptable, as demonstrated by
satisfactory feedback obtained through a treatment satisfaction questionnaire and
post-treatment interviews.
Secondary aim hypotheses. It is hypothesized that there will be a significant reduction in
participants' weight, BMI, and waist circumference from pre-treatment to post-treatment, from
pre-treatment to 6-months follow-up, and from pre-treatment to 12-months follow-up. It is
hypothesized that there will be a significant improvement in participants' eating and
physical activity habits from pre-treatment to post-treatment, from pre-treatment to 6-months
follow-up, and from pre-treatment to 12-months follow-up. It is also hypothesized that there
will be a significant improvement in participants' quality of life from pre-treatment to
post-treatment, from pre-treatment to 6-months follow-up, and from pre-treatment to 12-months
follow-up. Finally, it is hypothesized that there will be a significant improvement in
participants' body image from pre-treatment to post-treatment, from pre-treatment to 6-months
follow-up, and from pre-treatment to 12-months follow-up.
Method
This study will employ a single-arm pilot study, with repeated measures psychometric
evaluation. Standardized measures will be completed at pre-treatment, post-treatment, and 6-
and 12- months follow-up.
Recruitment
Participants will be accrued through the Louise Temerty Breast Center at Sunnybrook Health
Sciences Centre (SHSC). The study will be advertised by staff and through brochures in the
hospital and community-based organizations such as 'Willow Breast Cancer Support Canada', and
via electronic brochures posted on websites commonly accessed by BC survivors. Interested
women will contact the principal investigator, who will provide detailed information about
the nature of the project, the study objectives and procedures, answer any questions the
prospective participants have, and determine eligibility using the screening questionnaire.
Procedure
Participants will follow an individualized diet and exercise plan while participating in a
10-week online group, consisting of group discussion, educational videos, as well as homework
completion and related feedback. Once screened, participants will be invited to SHSC to
complete consent forms and baseline measures and a demographics questionnaire. They will be
asked to complete these same measures immediately following completion of the intervention,
as well as 6 and 12 months afterwards.
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