关节炎、饮食和活动促进试验(ADAPT):设计、基本原理和基线结果

Gary D Miller Ph.D. , W.Jack Rejeski Ph.D. , Jeff D Williamson M.D., M.P.H. , Timothy Morgan Ph.D. , Mary Ann Sevick Ph.D. , Richard F Loeser M.D. , Walt H Ettinger M.D. , Stephen P Messier Ph.D. , for the ADAPT investigators
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引用次数: 83

摘要

膝关节骨关节炎(OA)导致身体活动和日常生活能力的限制。肥胖是膝关节炎的一个危险因素,它似乎加剧了膝关节疼痛和残疾。关节炎、饮食和活动促进试验(ADAPT)旨在测试生活方式行为改变对患有膝关节OA的肥胖、久坐的老年人身体功能、疼痛和残疾的影响。这项对照试验采用二乘二因子设计,将316名久坐超重和肥胖的老年人随机分为四个18个月干预组:健康生活方式控制组;饮食减肥;结构化的运动;或者运动和饮食结合减肥。节食组的减肥目标是18个月减重5%。干预是根据来自群体动力学文献和社会认知理论的原则建模的。运动训练包括有氧和力量训练,每次60分钟,每周三次,以小组和家庭为基础。主要结果测量是使用西安大略和麦克马斯特大学骨关节炎指数的身体功能自我报告。其他测量包括定时爬楼梯、6分钟内步行距离、力量、步态、膝关节疼痛、健康相关生活质量、膝关节x线片、体重、饮食摄入和干预措施的成本效益。我们报告了根据超重和肥胖水平分层的基线数据,重点关注自我报告的身体功能和身体表现任务。ADAPT的结果将为临床医生推荐有效减少膝关节OA相关残疾发生率的行为疗法提供方法。
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The Arthritis, Diet and Activity Promotion Trial (ADAPT): design, rationale, and baseline results

Osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee leads to restrictions of physical activity and ability to perform activities of daily living. Obesity is a risk factor for knee OA and it appears to exacerbate knee pain and disability. The Arthritis, Diet, and Activity Promotion Trial (ADAPT) was developed to test the efficacy of lifestyle behavioral changes on physical function, pain, and disability in obese, sedentary older adults with knee OA. This controlled trial randomized 316 sedentary overweight and obese older adults in a two-by-two factorial design into one of four 18-month duration intervention groups: Healthy Lifestyle Control; Dietary Weight Loss; Structured Exercise; or Combined Exercise and Dietary Weight Loss. The weight-loss goal for the diet groups was a 5% loss at 18 months. The intervention was modeled from principles derived from the group dynamics literature and social cognitive theory. Exercise training consisted of aerobic and strength training for 60 minutes, three times per week in a group and home-based setting. The primary outcome measure was self-report of physical function using the Western Ontario and McMaster University Osteoarthritis Index. Other measurements included timed stair climb, distance walked in 6 minutes, strength, gait, knee pain, health-related quality of life, knee radiographs, body weight, dietary intake, and cost-effectiveness of the interventions. We report baseline data stratified by level of overweight and obesity focusing on self-reported physical function and physical performance tasks. The results from ADAPT will provide approaches clinicians should recommend for behavioral therapies that effectively reduce the incidence of disability associated with knee OA.

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