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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Not yet recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04600635
Other study ID # 38RC20.281
Secondary ID 2020-A02212-37
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date November 2, 2020
Est. completion date June 30, 2021

Study information

Verified date October 2020
Source University Hospital, Grenoble
Contact Anne-Laure Borel, MD, PhD
Phone +33476765509
Email alborel@chu-grenoble.fr
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Confinement disrupts social habits, the absence of professional activity or teleworking creates the possibility for individuals to work and/or sleep at times that are most convenient for them. Investigators hypothesize that subjects with a history of obesity will tend, during confinement, to return to their spontaneous chronotype. The evolution of chronotypes between the pre-confinement period and during confinement will allow to measure the percentage of subjects who are not usually living according to their spontaneous chronotype, due to social constraints. Finally, we wish to retrospectively question the subjects on the impact of confinement on their eating habits, physical activity, mood, employment, and so on.


Description:

Sleep patterns, evaluated in hunter-gatherer populations, show that without artificial interference, sleep is of course concomitant with the decrease in luminosity, but is also regulated by the outside temperature. Light pollution from night lighting and artificially regulated temperature contribute to distancing us from these physiological signals. In addition, the leisure activities linked to the screens encourage a voluntary restriction of sleep manifested by a later bedtime, whereas social constraints always impose the time of getting up. Sleep debt accumulates during the week and compensates for non-working days inducing a social jet lag of small amplitude, but repeated each week. Subjects who spontaneously or habitually develop a late chronotype (i.e. a propensity to be a "late sleeper, late riser") are the most exposed to this social jetlag between days worked when the sleep debt accumulates and days off when the sleep debt compensates. It has been widely demonstrated that a short sleep duration promotes weight gain. Subjects with a late chronotype associate a short sleep duration on days when they work and a significant social jetlag on days when they do not work. This late chronotype is associated with unfavourable eating behaviour and more emotional eating and constitutes a risk of developing metabolic diseases. Confinement disrupts social habits: lack of work activity or teleworking creates the possibility for individuals to work and/or sleep at times that are most convenient for them. Investigators hypothesize that subjects with a history of obesity will have tended, during confinement, to return to their spontaneous chronotype. The evolution of chronotypes between the pre-confinement period and during confinement will allow to measure the percentage of subjects who are not usually living according to their spontaneous chronotype, due to social constraints. Finally, we wish to retrospectively question the subjects on the impact of confinement on their eating habits, physical activity, mood and employment.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Not yet recruiting
Enrollment 500
Est. completion date June 30, 2021
Est. primary completion date January 31, 2021
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Adult (>18 years-old, no upper limit) - Included in the care pathways that prepare and then follow bariatric surgery - Who have an e-mail address and internet access Exclusion Criteria: - Subjects refusing to participate - Subjects who stayed in a country that did not organize containment during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
Bariatric surgery
Some patients in the cohort are followed by a multidisciplinary team in preparation for bariatric surgery. Others have already undergone bariatric surgery and are being followed up postoperatively.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University Hospital, Grenoble

References & Publications (1)

Borel AL. Sleep Apnea and Sleep Habits: Relationships with Metabolic Syndrome. Nutrients. 2019 Nov 2;11(11). pii: E2628. doi: 10.3390/nu11112628. Review. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in sleep and meal schedules before (mid-March 2020) at the end (May 11, 2020) and after containment (September 2020)
Secondary Change in self-reported body weight before (mid-March 2020) at the end (May 11, 2020) and after containment (September 2020)
Secondary Change in obesity-related quality of life evaluated by EQVOD questionnaire before (mid-March 2020), at the end (May 11, 2020) and after confinement (September 2020).
Secondary Change in physical activity assessed by the short form of International Physical Activity Questionnaire (sf-IPAQ) before (mid-March 2020), at the end (May 11, 2020) and after confinement (September 2020).
Secondary Change in mood and anxiety assessed by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) before (mid-March 2020) at the end (May 11, 2020)
Secondary Change in working status before (mid-March 2020) at the end (May 11, 2020)
Secondary Change in food security status assessed by the Household Food Security Scale Measure (HFSSM) before (mid-March 2020), at the end (May 11, 2020) and after containment (September 2020).
Secondary Search for a correlation between evolution of the chronotype and evolution of the weight, IPAQS score, HADS score, etc. before (mid-March 2020), at the end (May 11, 2020) and after containment (September 2020).
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