Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05264740 |
Other study ID # |
707228 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
February 1, 2023 |
Est. completion date |
February 1, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2024 |
Source |
McMaster University |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The overall goals of this project are to evaluate the feasibility of web-based nurse-led
motivational interviewing and educational interventions to promote healthy behaviours for
obesity prevention and maintenance of healthy weight and behaviours among young adults
attending university (age 18-29) in Hamilton, Ontario. A secondary goal is to evaluate if the
intervention is more successful among people at higher risk of obesity (a risk stratification
approach). A pilot randomized controlled trial will be conducted. Young adults will be
randomized to receive a tailored behavioural intervention through motivational interviewing
sessions with a nurse combined with educational materials, or control (educational materials
only). Both groups will be followed for 6 months and their weight at baseline and end of the
study will be measured. Outcomes related to the feasibility of the intervention and
participants' experiences in the study will also be measured.
Description:
Obesity is an established risk factor for many cancer types, including colon, endometrial,
breast, and pancreatic. Obesity is complex and treatment is challenging. Thus, primary
prevention of obesity is important. This is particularly important now since the COVID-19
pandemic had a profound impact on many obesity risk factors, such as chronic stress,
overeating, and physical inactivity. Early adulthood is a key period in obesity development
and a critical period for prevention interventions. Young adulthood is a period when
Canadians may be highly amenable to healthy behaviour change, develop lifelong healthy
behaviours and the primary prevention of obesity may be feasible. Interventions in early
adulthood have the potential for primordial cancer prevention (i.e., stopping cancer risk
factors before they develop). Despite the known impact of obesity on cancer, there have been
few attempts to implement tailored population-based obesity prevention interventions. Obesity
interventions must be flexible to address the complex causes of obesity and motivational
interviewing may be a successful strategy.
Primary Objective:
1. To determine the feasibility (enrollment, retention, data completion, satisfaction) of a
6-month behavioural and educational intervention to promote healthy behaviours for
obesity prevention among young adults.
Secondary objectives:
2. To determine the effects of the 6-month behavioural and educational intervention,
compared to an educational intervention only, on change in BMI, health behaviours
(nutrition, physical activity and sedentary time) and mental health (depression and
anxiety)
3. To explore whether obesity risk stratification tools identify young adults who may be
more successful in an obesity intervention.
Methods: A pilot randomized controlled trial will be conducted. Young adults (age 18-29)
attending McMaster University will be recruited and randomized to either the intervention or
control. The intervention will include individual motivational interviewing sessions (online
or in-person) with a trained public health nurse plus educational materials (based on
Canada's food guide and physical activity recommendations). The control group will receive
educational materials only. The primary feasibility outcomes that will be evaluated as part
of this pilot study include enrollment, retention (≥80%), data completion (≥80% of weights
measured, and surveys completed), and participant satisfaction. Clinical outcomes will
include weight change from baseline to 6-months, physical activity, nutrition risk, and
mental health. Outcomes will be measured remotely using 'smart' electronic scales, activity
trackers, and online questionnaires at baseline and every 2 months. Risk stratification will
be applied at baseline to identify participants at high risk of obesity (e.g., due to family
or personal history). Exit questionnaires will collect data on how participants felt about
the study and cost analysis will be conducted.
Our proposed evaluation of the feasibility of an obesity prevention intervention in early
adulthood will inform future larger RCTs for obesity prevention. The results of this study
have the potential to directly contribute to the primary prevention of several types of
cancer by testing an intervention that could be scalable to public health, post-secondary
education, or primary care settings.