Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03330548 |
Other study ID # |
Parrington1092 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
July 9, 2015 |
Est. completion date |
March 5, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2021 |
Source |
Phoenix VA Health Care System |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The purpose of this study is to conduct a preliminary test of the effectiveness of various
educational interventions to promote adoption of a whole-food, plant-strong diet and reduce
specific cardiovascular risk factors in Veterans, and subsequently perform a preliminary
pilot study on whether this dietary approach will change plaque inflammation and endothelial
function.
Description:
The purpose of this study is to conduct a preliminary test of the effectiveness of various
educational interventions to promote adoption of a whole-food, plant-strong diet and reduce
specific cardiovascular risk factors in Veterans, and subsequently perform a preliminary
pilot study on whether this dietary approach will change plaque inflammation and endothelial
function. The specific aims are to conduct a preliminary examination of:
1. The feasibility of Veterans to adopt a whole-food, plant-strong diet within five weeks,
following a plant-strong protocol, or within 90 days following a Plant Strong Diet (PSD)
using Culinary Rx, or by TeleMOVE! (standard of care control). Feasibility factors will
evaluate acceptability and practicality by a measure of the recruitment process,
attrition rate, reasons for dropping, perceived benefit, and comparison of dietary
pattern changes before and after the intervention.
a. Acceptability of a plant-strong diet.
2. (Part 1) The effectiveness of a five-week whole-food, plant-strong diet on
participants':
1. Cardiovascular risk factors: Low-Density Lipoprotein, (LDL-C), High-Density
Lipoprotein (HDL), Triglycerides (TG), Total Cholesterol (T Chol), C-Reactive
Protein (CRP), basic chemistry panel, blood pressure, weight, waist circumference,
and percent body fat.
2. Dietary pattern, particularly the degree to which meat, fish, dairy, and added oils
are decreased or eliminated from the dietary pattern; as well as the degree to
which the consumption of fruits and vegetables (particularly whole-food) are
increased from baseline intake, and the nutrient composition (percent of calories
from protein, fat, carbohydrate, and amount of fiber) of the diet changes.
3. (Part 3) The effectiveness of completing Culinary Rx as compared to TeleMOVE! for 90
days on participants':
1. Cardiovascular risk factors: Low-Density Lipoprotein, (LDL-C), High-Density
Lipoprotein (HDL), Triglycerides (TG), Total Cholesterol (T Chol), HgbA1c, blood
pressure, body mass index, weight, waist to hip ratio, and. medication usage (e.g.,
blood pressure, hypoglycemic, lipid lowering and anti-depressants).
2. Dietary pattern, particularly the degree to which meat, fish, dairy, and added oils
are decreased or eliminated from the dietary pattern; as well as the degree to
which the consumption of fruits and vegetables (particularly whole-food) are
increased from baseline intake, and the nutrient composition (percent of calories
from protein, fat, carbohydrate, and amount of fiber) of the diet changes.
3. Long-term lifestyle changes as measured by sustainability of dietary pattern and
cardiovascular risk changes that occurred at 90 days and were still present at six
months and one year, (excluding change in plaque inflammation and endothelial
function).
4. Establish the ability of Positron Emission Tomography 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose
radiopharmaceutical and magnetic resonance imaging (PET FDG-MRI) to assess serial change
in plaque inflammation and plaque volume (Part 2) and then perform a pilot test to
assess whether a 90-day PSD using Culinary Rx, or TeleMOVE! reduces plaque inflammation
using FDG uptake on PET scan and structural changes on MRI (Part 3).
1. Correlation analysis of aortic/carotid FDG uptake versus Framingham risk score from
consecutive subjects who underwent PET FDG for clinical indications at Phoenix VA
from January 1, 2010-May 31, 2015.
2. Change in aortic/carotid plaque FDG uptake, plaque volume and aortic pulse wave
velocity (measure of aortic/arterial stiffness) at baseline and following 90-day
PSD using Culinary Rx, or TeleMOVE! (pilot prospective study).