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Clinical Trial Summary

Obesity is a major cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factor that is rising fastest in children. Prevention of its damaging effects should begin earlier before they become irreversible. Pilot data identified novel markers of cardiometabolic dysfunction that may be better than body mass index at stratifying risk and as targets for CVD prevention in the young. Advanced imaging, blood tests and a meal-challenge will be used to comprehensively characterise how early metabolic dysfunction (liver and muscle fat, insulin resistance) affects cardiovascular health (arterial stiffness, myocardial energetics, gut vasoreactivity, diastolic function, blood pressure trajectory, left ventricular hypertrophy) in 210 adolescents (110 obese, 50 sedentary normal-weight, 50 high-activity). Reversibility of this phenotype will be tested in the obese by randomised controlled trial, comparing 8-week supervised exercise to a low-activity sham intervention. This study will provide the platform for developing practical, effective CVD prevention in children that is not simply focused on weight-loss.


Clinical Trial Description

Objectives and Outcome measures This proposal aims to (1) improve identification of early cardiometabolic dysfunction in children and (2) investigate the reversibility of this dysfunction through exercise. The study will provide the platform for developing practical, effective primordial CVD prevention strategies and the identification of novel early therapeutic targets. Study Design This study combines elements of both observational and interventional study designs. A prospective, cross-sectional study of adolescents with 1-year follow-up is combined with a randomised placebo (sham-exercise)-controlled trial (RCT) of eight-weeks of supervised, individualised exercise in an obese sub-population. The RCT is of an established, standardised exercise programme that is low-risk. Group allocation will be known only to the exercise physiologist and staff carrying out the exercise intervention. Fitness tests will be carried out in schools and in our exercise laboratory, which will provide opportunities to support questionnaire completion, fit accelerometers, fit and return ambulatory blood pressure monitors and address participant questions or concerns. In addition, participants will visit The Oxford Centre for Clinical Magnetic Resonance Research (OCMR) for the initial assessment and for the follow-up assessment for those participants in the obese group. Participants 210 participants will be recruited, 110 of these will be obese, 50 will be normal weight and their activity will be matched to the obese group and therefore, relatively sedentary. 50 normal weight controls will be selected on the basis of high levels of physical activity. The 110 obese participants will be randomised (1:1) to exercise intervention or a low-intensity sham exercise placebo intervention. These numbers are justified by a priori power calculations and take into account potential withdrawals at an attrition rate of 10% that is compatible with recent studies in the same or similar populations (e.g. Fit to Study). Compliance with the interventions will be increased by carrying out the interventions through an online remote methodology which can also be implemented in a school setting, predominantly during mandatory physical education (PE) lessons. Trained, experienced staff will supervise the exercise sessions, ensuring participant engagement with the activities by measuring heart rate and physical activity levels. Recruitment Pre-screening will be done through schools who will write to families informing them that their children will be taking part in an enhanced P.E. lesson at school that includes a fitness and health screening session. As part of this, the children will be asked to wear an activity watch (accelerometer) for a week. The session will explore many aspects of their agility and fitness and assess their muscle strength, power, motor skills, speed, endurance and flexibility, adjusted for their physical size (height and weight). The lesson will be educational, giving personalised feedback to the children on their strengths and how to improve on areas where they are less strong. The school will retain a file linking the children's names to random identifiers but the researchers will not have access to, or retain, any identifiable information. Parents will be sent a letter giving them the opportunity to withdraw their children from this health screening session and explaining that researchers may ask the school to contact them again on their behalf if their children are eligible for study participation on the basis of their fitness assessment. Children who are withdrawn by their parents will participate in their usual P.E. lesson. Recruitment will be done by letters to parents, delivered via the schools. Recruitment from an established population already in contact with the investigators research group should increase participation rates. It is difficult to precisely estimate the proportion of participants who fulfil the inclusion/exclusion criteria but it is assumed an obesity rate (BMI z-score (WHO) > 2) of approximately 20%. In addition to the school screening recruitment, participants may also volunteer to take part in the study through our online advertisement and social media campaign. Children who express an interest will be invited to contact the study team so that an initial health assessment can be completed and an information pack can be provided. This pack will contain participant information sheets and consent forms, and will collect information needed for BMI z-score calculation. Then potentially eligible participants will be invited to complete physical activity questionnaires to determine eligibility and group allocation. This is to avoid any unnecessary testing on ineligible participants at university sites and provides a suitable remote method to differentiate between active and inactive participants. Screening Pre-stratification of the potential population for recruitment will be carried out, based on BMI and activity levels. Obese and normal weight groups will be approached for recruitment sequentially, according to their rank position within their respective BMI-based criteria in order to maximise the difference between groups (e.g. the most obese will be approached first for the obese group). The normal weight group will be further stratified according to activity levels such that half of this group matches the obesity group for activity whilst the other half are highly-active individuals. Again, individuals within this subgroup will be approached according to their rank position in the distribution of activity such that the most active are preferred in order to maximise the difference between groups. Informed Consent Participant's parents/guardians will be asked to sign and date the latest approved version of the Informed Consent before any study-specific procedures are performed. The latest approved Participant Information sheet will be provided to them and verbal explanations will also be provided ensuring that all of the following information has been presented and understood: the exact nature of the study; what it will involve for the participant; the implications and constraints of the protocol; and all known risks or benefits involved in taking part. Participants will be told that they are free to withdraw from the study at any time and for any reason without being required to give a reason for their withdrawal. The participant will be allowed as much time as they wish to consider the information, and the opportunity to question the Investigator, their General Practitioner (GP) or other independent parties to decide whether they will participate in the study. Once these conditions are satisfied, written Informed Consent will be obtained by means of participant dated signature and dated signature of the person who presented and obtained the Informed Consent. The person taking consent will be a qualified member of the study team with a complete understanding of the study and with the authorisation of the Principal Investigator. A copy of the signed Informed Consent will be given to the participant and the original signed form will be retained at the study site. Randomisation Random allocation of members of the obese group to a sham fitness intervention or to a standardised exercise intervention will be carried out using an online randomisation process. The analysis will be carried out on an "intention-to-treat" basis when participants do not complete all elements of the data collection process and single-blinding will be maintained such that members of the team carrying out procedures at OCMR e.g. MRI and those involved in the data analysis are blinded to the allocation of intervention and sham groups. All data acquired at OCMR will be identified by a unique study number only. Inadvertent un-blinding will result in the exclusion of that individual's data from the analysis. Incidental findings Cardiovascular findings will be dealt with by the PI or another MRI-trained Consultant Paediatric Cardiologist. Findings in other imaging will be reviewed by the study Paediatric Radiologist. OCMR standard operation procedures (SOPs) for dealing with cardiac and non-cardiac incidental findings, respectively will be followed. Participants will not be informed of incidental findings on the day and will only be contacted after they have been formally reviewed and if a concern remains that further investigation is required. Discontinuation or withdrawal of participants from the study Each participant will have the right to withdraw from the study at any time. In addition, participation in the study may be discontinued at any time if the Investigator considers it necessary for any reason, including but not limited to: Pregnancy, ineligibility (either arising during the study or retrospectively, having been overlooked at screening), a significant protocol deviation, significant non-compliance with the exercise regimen or other study requirements, withdrawal of consent, and loss to follow-up. Data gathered to that point will be included in the analysis under an intention-to-treat principle. Where possible, further recruitment will be carried out to compensate for data loss resulting from early discontinuation of participation. The reason for all withdrawals will be recorded in the Case Report Form. Confounding Factors The exercise intervention RCT will be carried out over 8 weeks. The MRI scan operator will be blinded to RCT group allocations and all analyses will be carried out on anonymised data. Confounding factors in the observational part of the study will be addressed by matching of groups for age, sex, height, pubertal status and by matching the normal-weight sedentary group on activity level with the obese group. Questionnaires on cardiometabolic risk factors such as diet and sedentary behaviour will be used to quantify potential confounders. At least 24 hours prior to study visits, participants will be asked to avoid strenuous exercise, not smoke or drink alcohol, and eat a standardised evening meal before fasting in the morning. Analysis Analyses in the RCT will be carried out on an "intention-to-treat" basis. Secondary exploratory analysis will be to explore mechanisms ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04118543
Study type Interventional
Source University of Oxford
Contact Alexander Jones, BM, BSc, FRCP, PhD
Phone 07423474923
Email alexander.jones@paediatrics.ox.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date October 1, 2019
Completion date July 2024