Metabolic Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
ACtive Care After Transplantation, a Lifestyle Intervention in Renal Transplant Recipients
The aim of the present study is to compare the outcomes of standard care to the effects of
exercise alone, and exercise combined with nutrition counseling, on post-transplantation
weight gain and quality of life in renal transplant recipients (RTR). The primary outcome is
subdomain physical functioning of quality of life, (SF-36 PFS).
Secondary outcomes include other evaluations of quality of life (SF-36, KDQOL-SF, EQ-5D),
objective measures of physical functioning (aerobic capacity and muscle strength), level of
physical activity, gain in adiposity (body fat percentage by bio-electrical impedance
assessment, BMI, waist circumference), and cardiometabolic risk factors (blood pressure,
lipids, glucose metabolism). Additionally it is planned to study data on renal function,
medical history, medication, psychological factors (motivation, kinesiophobia, coping style),
nutrition knowledge, nutrition intake, nutrition status, fatigue, work participation, process
evaluation and cost-effectiveness.
Patient and graft survival in the first year after renal transplantation have improved
substantially over the last decade, but long-term graft loss and patient mortality have
remained high. It is increasingly recognized that the alarmingly poor cardio-metabolic risk
profile in renal transplant recipients (RTR) plays a main role in long-term outcome.
Improvement of long-term outcome will require specific efforts to improve cardio-metabolic
profile and its complications. Importantly, the substantial increase in body weight and body
fat that occurs after transplantation is a major trigger for the poor cardiometabolic profile
in the RTR, including post-transplant diabetes and metabolic syndrome.
The increase in body weight is mostly fat tissue and typically around 9-10 kg. Most of this
weight gain (~90%) occurs in the first year after transplantation. Recent data indicate that
steroid avoidance could not prevent this early increase in adiposity. This warrants specific
focus on lifestyle factors, i.e diet and physical activity. In the UMCG RTR cohort we found
that a lack of physical activity was related to a worse cardiometabolic profile and was an
independent predictor of mortality. Moreover, the substantial increase in fat massweight gain
was strongly related to low physical activity, high intake of energy-dense drinks, low
consumption of vegetables, to increased plasma triglycerides and the metabolic syndrome. The
intake of salt and saturated fat was high and fibre intake was low, indicating dietary habits
that deviate substantially from recommendations for a healthy diet. Thus, both physical
activity and dietary habits are important targets for lifestyle intervention in RTR.
Lasting improvements in lifestyle are notoriously difficult to obtain, but in recent years
substantial intervention expertise has been developed in other high risk groups including
prediabetes. It is now established that for long term purposes, prevention of excessive
weight gain is more effective than treatment of weight excess. Since in RTR most of the
weight is gained in the first year after transplantation, prevention is a very promising
approach. Moreover, data in prediabetes suggest that combined intervention targeting both
diet and physical activity may be particularly effective to this purpose.
Therefore, our aim is to investigate the effects on quality of life by a combined
diet-and-physical activity program in RTR in the first year after transplantation.
This randomized controlled intervention study will use a combined diet-and-physical activity
approach. After hospital discharge for transplantation, 219 patients will be randomized to
three either a control groups: one group, who will receive standard care, one group will be
exposed to a 3-month exercise program followed by individual counselling and one group will
be exposed to the exercise program + dietary or to intervention followed by individual
counselling. The individual counselling is to consolidate the achieved improvements in diet
and physical activity and will be provided until 15 months after inclusion. This counselling
is based on theories of behavioural change and motivational interviewing. Daily physical
activity is evaluated with a pedometer and dietary habits by questionnaires and food records.
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