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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02892331

Effects of Exercise Training Intensity on Fitness and Insulin Sensitivity in African Americans

The High Intensity Exercise to Promote Accelerated Improvements in CardiorEspiratory Fitness (HI-PACE) Study

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
52 (actual)
Sponsor
East Carolina University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
35 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

African Americans are at a substantially greater type 2 diabetes risk compared to Caucasians; however, very little data are available on the effects of exercise training on type 2 diabetes risk factors in at risk African Americans. The present proposal will evaluate the effects of 6 months of moderate versus vigorous intensity aerobic exercise training on fitness, insulin sensitivity, mitochondrial capacity, skeletal muscle oxidative/insulin sensitivity markers, adiposity, and quality of life in African Americans.

Detailed description

African Americans have a much greater risk of type 2 diabetes compared to Caucasians in the United States. Similarly, recent evidence has emerged that fitness level, a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes also tends to be lower in African Americans. Many scientific studies have shown that exercise training has a beneficial impact on fitness levels and a variety of other type 2 diabetes risk factors such as the reduction of glucose/insulin levels, and body fat Importantly, studies performed in mostly Caucasian populations suggest that exercise training at a vigorous intensity may promote greater improvements in type 2 diabetes risk factors compared to moderate intensity exercise, which may suggest that it has greater promise in reducing type 2 diabetes risk. However, few exercise training studies compare the health benefits of different exercise training programs (such as exercise intensity) in African Americans, which is clinically important due to their greater type 2 diabetes risk, and that fact that they are less likely to meet public health recommendations for physical activity compared to their Caucasian counterparts. The High Intensity exercise to Promote Accelerated improvements in CardiorEspiratory fitness (HI-PACE) study will evaluate the effect of exercise intensity on cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and insulin sensitivity in obese (BMI: 30-45) African Americans (40-65 yrs.) with at least 1 additional T2D risk factor. Participants (n=60) will be recruited in collaboration with the ECU Center for Health Disparities, and subsequently randomized to moderate intensity (MOD-INT, n=20) or high intensity (HIGH-INT, n=20) aerobic exercise training, or to a control group (CON, n=20) for 24 weeks. Supervised exercise training will be performed at a heart rate associated with \~50% and \~75% of VO2 max in the MOD-INT and the HIGH-INT groups, respectively at the same exercise volume of 600 MET-minutes per week (consistent with public health recommendations). The primary outcome is the change in CRF, which will be assessed at baseline, mid-intervention, and follow-up. Insulin sensitivity will be measured via an intravenous glucose tolerance test at baseline and follow-up. Other secondary measures include mitochondrial oxidative capacity using infrared and measurements on muscle biopsies (PGC-1α and other indices of mitochondrial content), the expression of a protein involved with insulin action (GLUT-4 expression) in skeletal muscle as well as systemic inflammation, adiposity, quality of life and exercise enjoyment measures.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALModerate intensity exercise training (MOD-INT)Participants in the MOD-INT group will exercise at the heart rate associated with 45-55% VO2 max. The exercise volume will be 600 MET-minutes per week, which is consistent with current public health guidelines (500-1,000 MET-minutes)
BEHAVIORALHigh Intensity exercise training (HI-INT)Participants in the HI-INT group will exercise at the heart rate associated with 70-80% VO2 max (heart rate ranges will be updated at mid-intervention CRF assessment). The exercise volume will be 600 MET-minutes per week, which is consistent with current public health guidelines (500-1,000 MET-minutes)3

Timeline

Start date
2016-10-01
Primary completion
2021-08-01
Completion
2021-08-01
First posted
2016-09-08
Last updated
2024-06-13
Results posted
2024-06-13

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02892331. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.