Trials / Withdrawn
WithdrawnNCT04323423
The DURATION Study: reDUcing sedentaRy behAviour to Maintain cogniTIve functiON.
Determining the Optimal Reduction in Sedentary Behaviour to Reduce Glycemic Variability and Maintain Cognition: a Randomized Control Trial
- Status
- Withdrawn
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 0 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Western University, Canada · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 65 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Rationale: Older adults spend the majority of their time in sedentary behaviours (SB). High amounts of SB have been correlated with reduced cognitive performance. Long periods of time spent sitting results in excessive glycemic variability, potentially contributing to cognitive decline. Reducing/replacing SB with short intermittent bouts of light physical activity have shown positive effects on glycemic variability. Thus, interrupting prolonged sitting with bouts of light physical activity may regulate blood glucose and thus mitigate cognitive decline. Purpose: This study intends to investigate the appropriate interval frequency of post-prandial SB reduction, by light physical activity needed to optimize total and incremental area under the curve for glucose response in overweight older adults at risk for glucose intolerance with mild cognitive impairment in both lab and free-living environments. Second, this study aims to investigate the acute impact of reducing SB on glycemic variability and its relationship with cognition. Hypothesis: First, there will be a dose-dependent response of more frequent interruptions of SB (more frequent intervals of light physical activity) with better glycemic control. Second, reducing SB will result in less glycemic variability, which will translate into better levels of cognitive performance. Methods: Generalized linear mixed models with random intercepts will be used to evaluate the differential effects of the experimental conditions on the selected outcomes.
Detailed description
This study will be a randomized crossover trial and reported in accordance with CONSORT guidelines. The study will involve a total of three seven-day conditions (2 experimental and 1 control) with a three-week washout period in-between to minimize practice effects for a total intervention period of nine weeks (see figure 1). Each condition will consist of one day supervised in the laboratory followed by six at-home days, following lab protocol as closely as possible. Participants will be referred to the study by their physician. Interested participants will be asked to contact the researcher by email or phone call. Interested Participants will be invited into the lab for a familiarization session. They will be instructed to avoid caffeine, alcohol and MVPA for 48 hours prior to this session. During this session the following information will be obtained; * Written informed consent * Height using a stadiometer and weight using a standard beam scale * Demographics questionnaire (education, ethnicity, family background, comorbidities) * Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PARQ+) (Bredin, Gledhill, Jamnik, \& Warburton, 2013) * Resting blood pressure- will be measured once on each arm and then twice on the left arm with an automated BP monitor The participants will be educated/familiarized on the following; * Cognitive assessments - Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB) * Fitting with an inclinometer (activPAL4) Participants will be visited at their home \~72hrs prior to each condition to be fitted with the CGM and ActivPal. They will also be instructed to avoid caffeine, alcohol and MVPA for 48 hours prior to each of the three conditions. Dinner will be consumed between 7:00 and 9:00 pm, allowing for a 10 hour fast prior to the experimental condition the next morning. All participants will be instructed to arrive at the laboratory (with minimal activity during commute) at approximately 7:00 am. Upon arrival, participants will be asked to use the washroom and then rest for 30 minutes preceding a blood pressure measurement and first cognitive assessment. The participants will undergo the CANTAB cognitive assessments (at \~7:30 am) before meal consumption. A standardized breakfast meal will be consumed at 8:00 am, followed by lunch at 12:00 pm and dinner at 5:00 pm. Participants will be allotted 20 minutes for full meal consumption. The CANTAB cognitive assessments will then be re-administered at approximately 7:30 pm. Participants will be supervised throughout the conditions to ensure adherence to the protocols and will be permitted to watch DVDs, read books, magazines, newspapers, talk and/or work on a laptop computer. However, what they do during the first condition will be documented and then replicated for the remaining experimental conditions. Intensity of the bout intervals will be kept to an RPE of 6-9 using the Borg RPE scale. Once the 12- hour laboratory component is complete, participants will be sent home (still wearing the CGM and activPAL) with the intension of replicating the laboratory-based protocol after each meal in their own free-living environment. Participants will track their mealtimes by sending photos to the researcher before consumption during the 6 at home days. The researcher will then go to the participants house on the last day (day 7) of each condition to re-administer the CANTAB cognitive assessments and collect the CGM, and activPal. There will then be a 3-week washout period, followed by replication of protocol for the remaining two conditions.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | interrupting sedentary behaviour with light physical activity | replacing sitting with light walking bouts at different frequencies/durations |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2025-12-01
- Primary completion
- 2025-12-01
- Completion
- 2025-12-01
- First posted
- 2020-03-26
- Last updated
- 2024-03-05
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04323423. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.