Hypertension Clinical Trial
— SMARTEROfficial title:
Step Monitoring to Improve ARTERial Health
| Verified date | March 2017 |
| Source | McGill University Health Center |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | |
| Study type | Interventional |
Many people with diabetes and/or high blood pressure (hypertension) are not very active.
When people are more active, they can reduce the chances of having a heart attack or stroke.
Walking more is a cheap and effective way to be more active and to lower the risk of heart
attacks and strokes. The problem is that many people do not walk enough! The investigators
will study if people with diabetes and/or hypertension walk more when the doctor gives them
a prescription with the number of steps they should be walking every day. The investigators
will compare this group, called 'active', to another group, called 'control', in which
doctors and their patients do what they usually do, over a period of one year.
The investigators will measure the number of steps the investigators walk everyday with a
step counter or pedometer. In the step count prescription group, the doctors will give to
the 'active' group a pedometer, a step count record book, and step count prescriptions. The
overall goal is to gradually increase daily steps. The speed of the increase in step count
will be slower for less active people. At each visit the doctor will look at the step count
record book. The doctor will then give a new step count prescription to the patients.
Patients of the two groups will see their doctor about four times during the year, which is
how often they usually see their doctor. At the end of one year, the investigators will see
the difference in the hardness of the arteries between the 'active' and the 'control'
groups, using simple and safe measurements, similar to ultrasound in pregnant ladies. People
with hard arteries are more likely to have a heart attack or stroke.
The investigators suspect that patients who get the step count prescriptions will walk more
and their arteries will be less hard than the control group. Our study will help find out if
this is true. In that case, doctors should take the time to prescribe steps for all their
patients with diabetes and/or hypertension.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 347 |
| Est. completion date | March 2016 |
| Est. primary completion date | March 2016 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
| Gender | All |
| Age group | 18 Years to 95 Years |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Followed by a SMARTER collaborating doctor - BMI = 25 kg/m2 but < 40 kg/m2 (i.e. overweight to class II obese) - Type 2 diabetes and/or hypertension - Conversant in either English or French Exclusion Criteria: - = 150 minutes of leisure time physical activity per week be self- report - Acute or chronic co-morbid conditions that may affect the ability or likelihood to adhere to trial procedures (e.g. inflammatory arthritis, active malignancy, major depression or other significant psychiatric disorders, and/or significant visual impairment) - Pregnancy/planning a pregnancy - Baseline step count averaging = 10,000 steps/day at baseline assessment - Arrhythmia that prevents accurate assessment of carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (e.g., atrial fibrillation) |
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | Institut de recherches cliniques de Montréal | Montreal | Quebec |
| Canada | Jewish General Hospital | Montreal | Quebec |
| Canada | Lakeshore General Hospital | Montreal | Quebec |
| Canada | McGill University Health Centre - Montreal General Hospital | Montreal | Quebec |
| Canada | McGill University Health Centre - Royal Victoria Hosptial | Montreal | Quebec |
| Canada | St. Mary's Hospital Center | Montreal | Quebec |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| McGill University Health Center | Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) |
Canada,
Dasgupta K, Rosenberg E, Daskalopoulou SS; SMARTER collaborators.. Step Monitoring to improve ARTERial health (SMARTER) through step count prescription in type 2 diabetes and hypertension: trial design and methods. Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2014 Jan 6;13:7. doi: 10.1186/1475-2840-13-7. — View Citation
Dasgupta K, Rosenberg E, Joseph L, Cooke AB, Trudeau L, Bacon SL, Chan D, Sherman M, Rabasa-Lhoret R, Daskalopoulou SS; SMARTER Trial Group.. Physician step prescription and monitoring to improve ARTERial health (SMARTER): A randomized controlled trial in — View Citation
Dasgupta K, Rosenberg E, Joseph L, Trudeau L, Garfield N, Chan D, Sherman M, Rabasa-Lhoret R, Daskalopoulou SS. Carotid femoral pulse wave velocity in type 2 diabetes and hypertension: capturing arterial health effects of step counts. J Hypertens. 2017 Ja — View Citation
Hajna S, Kestens Y, Daskalopoulou SS, Joseph L, Thierry B, Sherman M, Trudeau L, Rabasa-Lhoret R, Meissner L, Bacon SL, Gauvin L, Ross NA, Dasgupta K; Diabetes, GPS, and Walkablilty Study Group.. Neighbourhood walkability and home neighbourhood-based phys — View Citation
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | change in arterial stiffness | Arterial stiffness will be assessed at baseline and one year by measurement of carotid femoral pulse wave velocity through applanation tonometry. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in daily step count | Step counts will be computed at baseline and final assessments using a Yamax SW-200, based on one week of recording. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in physical activity | Change in overall activity will be computed from one week of accelerometry data collected at baseline and at one year | one year | |
| Secondary | change in physical fitness | Change in physical fitness will be computed using data collected through maximal exercise stress testing at baseline and one year | one year | |
| Secondary | weight change from baseline | Participants will be weighed at baseline and one year in light clothes, without shoes. Change in weight and percentage change in weight from baseline will be computed. | one year | |
| Secondary | body mass index change from baseline | Height will be measured using a mounted stadiometer. Body mass index (BMI) will be computed as weight in kg divided by height in meters squared. Change in BMI will be calculated using measurements at baseline and at one year. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in waist circumference | Waist circumference will be measured midway between the iliac crest and the lower rib margin. Change in waist circumference will be computed based on data from baseline and one year. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in waist- to- hip ratio | Hip circumference will be measured at the point of greatest posterior extension of the buttocks. Waist (in cm) to hip (in cm) ratio (WHR) will be computed and change in WHR will be determined using data from baseline and one year. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in systolic blood pressure | The participant will sit at rest for at least five minutes and then undergo blood pressure assessment using the BpTRU Blood Pressure Monitor (seated position, arm supported). The blood pressure assessments will be at two- minute intervals with the patient supine and the measurement in the right arm. The first value will be discarded and the last five measurements averaged. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in insulin resistance | Using fasting glucose and fasting insulin measurements, insulin resistance will be computed using the Homeostatic Model Assessment- Insulin Resistance (HOMA- IR) equation [Fasting glucose (mmol/L) X Fasting insulin (mU/L) ÷ 22.5]. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in hemoglobin A1C in diabetes patients | Change in hemoglobin A1C will be ascertained for diabetes patients between baseline and one year. A1C will be measured with an HPLC analyzer. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in total cholesterol | Total cholesterol will be measured using spectrophotometer at baseline and one year | one year | |
| Secondary | change in high density lipoprotein cholesterol | High density lipoprotein cholesterol will be measured using spectrophotometer at baseline and one year | One year | |
| Secondary | Change in triglyceride levels | Triglyceride levels will be measured using spectrophotometer at baseline and one year | One year | |
| Secondary | change in low density lipoprotein cholesterol | The low density lipoprotein cholesterol will be calculated using the Friedewald equation at baseline and one year, based on total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol values measured using spectrophotometer. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in apolipoprotein A1 | Apolipoprotein A1 will be measured using the turbimetric method at baseline and one year. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in Apolipoprotein B | Apolipoprotein B will be measured using the turbimetric method at baseline and one year. | One year | |
| Secondary | change in Apolipoprotein A1 to B ratio | Apolipoproteins A1 and B will be measured using the turbimetric method at baseline and one year and the A1 to B ratio computed at these time points | one year | |
| Secondary | change in total cholesterol to high density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio | Total cholesterol and high density lipoprotein cholesterol will be measured using spectrophotometer at baseline and at one year; the total cholesterol to high density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio will be computed at both of these time points | one year | |
| Secondary | change in high sensitivity C-reactive protein | High sensitivity C-reactive protein will be assayed through an immunonephelometric method at baseline and one year | one year | |
| Secondary | change in antihypertensive medication use | Investigators will assess type and dose of antihypertensive medications at baseline and one year and assess whether there has been a net increase, decrease, or no change in medication use. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in antihyperglycemic medication | Investigators will assess type and dose of antihyperglycemic medications at baseline and one year and assess whether there has been a net increase, decrease, or no change in medication use. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in lipid- lowering medications | Investigators will assess type and dose of lipid- lowering medications at baseline and one year and assess whether there has been a net increase, decrease, or no change in medication use. | one year | |
| Secondary | change in diastolic blood pressure | The participant will sit at rest for at least five minutes and then undergo blood pressure assessment using the BpTRU Blood Pressure Monitor (seated position, arm supported). The blood pressure assessments will be at two- minute intervals with the patient supine and the measurement in the right arm. The first value will be discarded and the last five measurements averaged. | one year |
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