减肥手术后减肥行为和心理社会预测因素的多传感器生态瞬时评估:多中心前瞻性纵向评估的研究方案。

Q1 Medicine BMC Obesity Pub Date : 2018-11-05 DOI:10.1186/s40608-018-0204-6
Stephanie P Goldstein, J Graham Thomas, Sivamainthan Vithiananthan, George A Blackburn, Daniel B Jones, Jennifer Webster, Richard Jones, E Whitney Evans, Jody Dushay, Jon Moon, Dale S Bond
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引用次数: 10

摘要

背景:减肥手术是目前最有效的减肥策略。然而,并不是所有患者都能在最初的减肥中取得成功,而且在某种程度上体重恢复是非常常见的,有时甚至早在手术后1-2年。手术、人口统计学和医学因素不能完全解释亚理想体重减轻,这导致人们更加重视患者的行为,而适当饮食和体育活动的临床指南证明了这一点。然而,为此类指南提供信息的研究往往依赖于不精确的措施,或者并非针对减肥手术。对心理社会因素和环境背景对结果的影响也知之甚少。为了解决研究差距和测量局限性,我们设计了一个方案,创新地集成了多种测量工具,以确定哪些行为、环境背景和心理社会因素与结果相关,并探讨心理社会因素/环境背景如何影响体重。本文详细描述了我们的研究协议,重点是开发和部署多传感器评估工具,以满足我们的研究目标。方法:这项由美国国立卫生研究院资助的前瞻性队列研究使用多传感器平台评估减肥手术后体重减轻的行为、心理社会和环境预测因素,该平台集成了客观传感器和通过智能手机在患者自然环境中实时收集的自我报告信息。100名成年减肥手术患者(年龄21-70岁)的目标样本在术前基线以及术后3、6和12个月使用该多传感器平台,评估推荐的行为(如用餐频率、体力活动)、具有与手术结果相关的先前证据的心理社会指标(如情绪/抑郁),以及关键环境因素(例如食品环境的类型/质量)。重量也在每个评估点进行测量。讨论:该项目有可能建立对减肥手术后成功和风险的行为和心理社会因素的更复杂和有效的理解。这一新的理解可能直接有助于改进(即,具体、一致和验证)推荐的术前和术后行为指南,从而改善手术结果。这些数据还将为改善手术结果的辅助干预的行为、心理社会和环境目标提供信息。试验注册:于2016年5月19日注册试验NCT02777177。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Multi-sensor ecological momentary assessment of behavioral and psychosocial predictors of weight loss following bariatric surgery: study protocol for a multicenter prospective longitudinal evaluation.

Background: Bariatric surgery is currently the most effective strategy for producing significant and durable weight loss. Yet, not all patients achieve initial weight loss success and some degree of weight regain is very common, sometimes as early as 1-2 years post-surgery. Suboptimal weight loss not fully explained by surgical, demographic, and medical factors has led to greater emphasis on patient behaviors evidenced by clinical guidelines for appropriate eating and physical activity. However, research to inform such guidelines has often relied on imprecise measures or not been specific to bariatric surgery. There is also little understanding of what psychosocial factors and environmental contexts impact outcomes. To address research gaps and measurement limitations, we designed a protocol that innovatively integrates multiple measurement tools to determine which behaviors, environmental contexts, and psychosocial factors are related to outcomes and explore how psychosocial factors/environmental contexts influence weight. This paper provides a detailed description of our study protocol with a focus on developing and deploying a multi-sensor assessment tool to meet our study aims.

Methods: This NIH-funded prospective cohort study evaluates behavioral, psychosocial, and environmental predictors of weight loss after bariatric surgery using a multi-sensor platform that integrates objective sensors and self-report information collected via smartphone in real-time in patients' natural environment. A target sample of 100 adult, bariatric surgery patients (ages 21-70) use this multi-sensor platform at preoperative baseline, as well as 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively, to assess recommended behaviors (e.g., meal frequency, physical activity), psychosocial indicators with prior evidence of an association with surgical outcomes (e.g., mood/depression), and key environmental factors (e.g., type/quality of food environment). Weight also is measured at each assessment point.

Discussion: This project has the potential to build a more sophisticated and valid understanding of behavioral and psychosocial factors contributing to success and risk after bariatric surgery. This new understanding could directly contribute to improved (i.e., specific, consistent, and validated) guidelines for recommended pre- and postoperative behaviors, which could lead to improved surgical outcomes. These data will also inform behavioral, psychosocial, and environmental targets for adjunctive interventions to improve surgical outcomes.

Trial registration: Registered trial NCT02777177 on 5/19/2016.

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BMC Obesity
BMC Obesity Medicine-Health Policy
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期刊介绍: Cesation (2019). Information not localized.
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