Osteoporotic Fracture Clinical Trial
— ThermOsOfficial title:
Preventing the Risk of Osteoporotic Fracture in Premenopausal Women by a Spa Residential Physical Activity Program
Osteoporosis is an increasing public health problem. Involution of bone mass in women is due
to a reduction in sensitivity of the bone to the mechanical stress due to the slow-down of
the bone turnover after 35 years old. Osteoporosis is a silent disease combining a decrease
in bone mass (quantity) and an impaired bone microarchitecture (quality) leading to an
increased risk of fracture. Bone microarchitecture is an important element to be taken into
account in assessing the bone properties, as demonstrated by numerous ex vivo studies.
Bone densitometry only identifies 50% of osteoporotic fractures. The other half of the
fractures appears in osteopenic women. The measurement of bone mineral density is too limited
to assess risk of fracture. Bone microarchitecture can be assessed through a peripheral
quantitative computed tomography scan (computed tomography peripherical - pQCT). The
microarchitecture data allow the calculation of bone strength index (BSI) and stress strength
index (SSI) highly predictive of fracture risk. These qualitative determinants of bone
fragility are the most relevant to evaluate effect of physical activity over a short period
compared with bone mineral content and density, which requires several months of constraints.
Biochemical markers of bone turnover, specifically those of bone resorption, are predictive
of the risk of osteoporotic fracture.
Physical activity can reduce the risk of fracture up to 20-35% via direct effects on bone
strength, at any age. However, response of bone varies with modalities of exercise. Repeated
exercise produces greater bone adaptations than a single bout. Moreover, it has been well
demonstrated since 1970 that bone responds to a dynamic stimulation, but not a static
stimulation, with a dose response relationship. It has been confirmed in premenopausal women.
The effect of physical activity on microarchitectural bone parameters (porosity and density
of cortical and trabecular) has not been investigated in primary prevention. This original
study would highlight the effect of short-term specific physical activity on the prevention
of bone fragility (qualitative) observed with age in premenopausal women.
The main hypothesis is that a spa residential program including physical activity will have
greater benefits on bone cortical porosity than a spa residential program alone or physical
activity alone, in premenopausal women.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 90 |
Est. completion date | March 1, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | March 1, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Female |
Age group | 40 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Women with regular cycles - 40-50 years old - Sedentary lifestyle - stable body weight over the previous 6 months - Normal weighted (BMI<30) - written informed consent. - Affiliated to French health care system (for France) Exclusion Criteria: - Menopausal women - Regular physical activity > 4 hours / week of moderate or high intensities - Participant refusal to participate - Hepatic, renal, or psychiatric diseases, nor cardiovascular or endocrine diseases (thyroid diseases will be included) - HIV infection - Use of medications altering body weight, corticosteroids, Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs - Use of medications influencing bone parameters such as bisphosphonate, other osteoporotic treatment therapy, or chemotherapy - Regular alcohol consumption (>20g of alcohol per day) - Restricted diet over the previous 6 months - Deficit or supplementation in vitamin D - Protected persons are not excluded |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | CHU Clermont-Ferrand | Clermont-Ferrand |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand | AME2P Laboratory (EA 3533), University Clermont Auvergne, Clermont-Ferrand, France, Auvergne Rhone Alpes Regional Council (Région Auvergne Rhône Alpes), Clermont-Ferrand, France, European Regional Development Fund (FEDER - Fonds Européen de Développement Economique et Régional), Innova-Therm, Auvergne, France, Spa resort of Bourbon-Lancy, place d’Aligre 71140 Bourbon-Lancy, France, Spa resort of Chaudes Aigues, 27 avenue Georges Pompidou, BP21, 15110 Chaudes Aigues, France |
France,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Variation of bone cortical porosity in premenopausal women after the interventional phase. | To evaluate the effectiveness of a spa residential program including physical activity (Sp-Ex) on bone cortical porosity compared with a spa residential program alone (Sp-alone) or physical activity alone (Ex-alone), in premenopausal women. | at Baseline | |
Primary | Variation of bone cortical porosity in premenopausal women | To evaluate the effectiveness of a spa residential program including physical activity (Sp-Ex) on bone cortical porosity compared with a spa residential program alone (Sp-alone) or physical activity alone (Ex-alone), in premenopausal women. | after 10 days | |
Primary | Variation of bone cortical porosity in premenopausal women | To evaluate the effectiveness of a spa residential program including physical activity (Sp-Ex) on bone cortical porosity compared with a spa residential program alone (Sp-alone) or physical activity alone (Ex-alone), in premenopausal women. | after 6 months | |
Primary | Variation of bone cortical porosity in premenopausal women | To evaluate the effectiveness of a spa residential program including physical activity (Sp-Ex) on bone cortical porosity compared with a spa residential program alone (Sp-alone) or physical activity alone (Ex-alone), in premenopausal women. | after 12 months | |
Secondary | bone fracture risk | questionnaire (FRAX - Fracture Risk Assessment Tool, bone fracture risks ; after registering results from DXA and personal details the computer calculates the fracture risks based on an algorithm) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | General Health | General Health will be measured using the General Health Questionnaire, (there is no score, just informative health information) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Greater short-term benefits on health factors with the Sp-Ex program than with Sp-alone or Ex-alone (Bone health will be obtained from the combination of 5 measures). | Evaluate the effectiveness of the Sp-Ex program compared with the Sp-alone or Ex-alone on short-term modification of health factors among premenopausal women. | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Physical Activity | Quality of life will be measured using the SF-36 (Short Form 36 ; 9 sections questionnaire ; scale range from 0 (bad) to 100(excellent)) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Quality of life | Calcium intake will be measured using the Fardellonne questionnaire (recommended daily consummation in France: women 900 mg/d; women >55 years old 1200mg/d) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Calcium intake | Depression and anxiety will be measured using Hamilton scale (scale range from 0 to 4, if > 20 high level of anxiety) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Depression and anxiety | Depression and anxiety will be measured using the Hospital anxiety and depression scale (scale range from 0 to 3, with a total score between 0 to 21. Threshold score is 8) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Depression and anxiety | anxiety will be measured using the state and trait anxiety inventory scale (scale range from 1 to 4, with a total score between 20 to 80. If <35 poor level of anxiety, if > 66 very high level of anxiety) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Anxiety | Burn-out will be measured using the Maslach Burn Out Inventory (scale range from 0 to 6, with 0 = never and 6 = almost always) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Burn-out | Job content will be measured using the Karasek questionnaire (scale range from 1 to 4, with 1= not agreed and 4 = totally agreed) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Job content | Job content will be measured using the Karasek questionnaire (scale range from 1 to 4, with 1= not agreed and 4 = totally agreed) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Body mass | Body mass (muscle and fat) will be measured using Impedancemeter | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Anthropometry | weight (kg) will be obtained according to the ISAK (International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry) recommendations | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Anthropometry | height (m) will be obtained according to the ISAK (International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry) recommendations | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Anthropometry | waist circumference (cm) will be obtained according to the ISAK (International Society for the Advancement of Kinanthropometry) recommendations | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Basic biology | HbA1c (mmol/mol) will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Basic biology | HDLc (mmol/L) will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Basic biology | LDL-cholesterol (mmol/L) will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Basic biology | Triglyceride (TG-mmol/L) will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Vitamin D | Vitamin D will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Leptin | Leptin will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | Pro-inflammatory cytokine | Pro-inflammatory cytokine (IL-1ß, IL-6, IL-1, TNFa, IFN?) will be measured using endocrine assays | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | heart rate variability | heart rate variability will be measured using Holter | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | electrodermal activity | electrodermal activity (skin conductance) will be measured using Wirst band electrodes | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | physical activity behaviour | physical activity behaviour will be measured using an activity journal (participant will have to write all their daily activity from when they wake up to when they go to bed) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months | |
Secondary | physical activity behaviour | will be measured using an accelerometer-pedometer watch (daily step count) | at Baseline, after 10 days, after 6 months, after 12 months |
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