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Clinical Trial Summary

Food nutritional labels are one way to support people to make more informed, healthier food choices. However, there is limited evidence from trials showing that nutrition information on food or drinks is changing the food purchasing or food/beverage consumption behaviours. Many people do not understand the meaning of kilocalories (kcals, calories) or grams of fat displayed on food labels, and often underestimate the number of calories when labelling is not provided. An alternative or complementary approach to current nutrition labelling, is to provide calorie information with a clear interpretation of what the calorie content of the food item/meal or beverage means in terms of energy expenditure. This approach has been called physical activity calorie equivalent (or expenditure) labelling (PACE), which aims to show the public how many minutes (or miles/kilometres) of physical activity (e.g. walking or running) are equivalent to the calories contained in food/beverages. For example, "the calories in this chocolate bar require 95 minutes of walking to burn off". One context in which the public consume a lot of calories is from vending machines. We hypothesise that providing consumers with PACE information on hot beverage vending machines will reduce the average number of calories per transaction dispensed from the vending machines compared with when no PACE information/labelling is presented on vending machines. The study will adopt what is called a stepped wedge randomised controlled trial design involving 42 hot beverage vending machines in 27 buildings (clusters). Clusters will be randomly allocated to one of eight sequences across 24 weeks, which will dictate the time (weeks) at which clusters display the vending machine PACE labelling intervention. Weeks one to four will constitute a baseline period, during which the data will be collected from all vending machines without PACE labelling in place. This will be followed by 20 weeks during which the PACE labelling intervention will be introduced and maintained at each building according to a stepped wedge design (Figure 2). Specifically, every two weeks, three or four clusters will move to the intervention condition. The number of transactions from the vending machines will be collected over the study period and we will compare the number of transactions in the weeks when the PACE labelling is displayed compared to when it was not.


Clinical Trial Description

The study will adopt a stepped wedge randomised controlled trial (SW-CRT) design involving 42 hot beverage vending machines in 27 buildings (clusters). Clusters will be randomly allocated to one of eight sequences across 24 weeks, which will dictate the time at which clusters implement the vending machine PACE labelling intervention (condition). Weeks one to four will constitute a baseline period, during which the data will be collected from all vending machines without PACE labelling in place. This will be followed by 20 weeks during which the PACE labelling intervention will be introduced and maintained at each building according to the SW-CRT design. Specifically, every two weeks, three clusters will move from no PACE labelling to the intervention condition. All vending machines have the same seven hot beverage options (hot water, espresso, black coffee, flat white coffee, cappuccino, mocha, latte macchiato and hot chocolate). When vending machines are randomised to display the PACE labelling, they will display sticker labels showing the number of calories and minutes walking (averaged speed) to expend the calories of each beverage. Data for the number and type of hot beverages transactions will be collected every week or two weeks from each vending machine. Photograph date stamped evidence of the number of transactions beverages will be collected. The primary outcome will be averaged kilocalories (kcals) per transaction. We will evaluate the proportion of total drinks dispensed that are high calorie, and so each beverage dispensed will be dichotomised as being high-calorie or not high-calorie. It is possible people choose not to have a beverage at all in response to the intervention. A secondary aim is to compare total number of transactions of beverages between the PACE labelling and comparator condition. Randomisation will be performed at the cluster (building) level. A total of 27 buildings will be randomised to one of eight sequence using covariate constrained randomisation (CCR) to ensure a balance of several cluster-level covariates. The covariates included in this constrained randomisation procedure will be: type of building, number of vending machines in each building/cluster and average baseline (weeks 1-4) mocha transactions per cluster (most caloric beverage) (defined as low, medium and high). Three days prior to the next batch of clusters transitioning to the intervention condition, the trial statistician will reveal the subsequent vending machines that have been randomised to display the PACE labelling in line with the study plan. The allocation sequence will not be known to researchers except for the trial statisticians. ;


Study Design


NCT number NCT06072300
Study type Interventional
Source Loughborough University
Contact Amanda Daley, PhD
Phone 01509 226353
Email a.daley@lboro.ac.uk
Status Recruiting
Phase Phase 3
Start date October 30, 2023
Completion date May 31, 2024