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Sarcopenia Prevention With a Targeted Exercise and Protein Supplementation Program

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Fall
Sarcopenia
Frailty
Malnutrition; Protein
Interventions
Dietary Supplement: Protein Supplement
Dietary Supplement: Protein-free Supplement
Procedure: Active Exercise
Procedure: Control Exercise
Registration Number
NCT03417531
Lead Sponsor
University of Zurich
Brief Summary

Physical inactivity and protein malnutrition have been implicated to be key and modifiable causes of enhanced muscle mass loss among seniors. However, the individual benefit, as well as the additive or possibly interactive benefit of exercise and Protein supplementation on fall prevention has yet to be confirmed in a large clinical trial. This study aims to test the individual and combined effect and cost-effectiveness of a simple home exercise program and / or protein supplementation on the risk of falling in seniors at high risk of progressive muscle mass loss and sarcopenia.

Detailed Description

The number of seniors age 75 and older is predicted to double by 2030, as is the number of seniors with mobility disability, physical frailty and resulting consequences, such as falls and loss of autonomy. This causes an enormous challenge to the individual, to medical care, and the society as a whole. A condition that is considered central to the development of physical frailty and its consequences is sarcopenia, the loss of muscle mass and strength. To date sarcopenia is underdiagnosed in clinical care and effective treatments for sarcopenia are missing.

This study aims to test the individual and combined effect and cost-effectiveness of a simple home exercise program and / or protein supplementation on the risk of falling in seniors at high risk of progressive muscle mass loss and sarcopenia.

The STRONG trial will be a 2x2 factorial design multi-centre double-blind randomized controlled clinical trial among 800 senior men and women; study duration is 12 months. The primary endpoint is the rate of falling. Key secondary endpoints include functional decline, and the proportion of seniors with frailty, sarcopenia, and loss of autonomy. STRONG will further assess the cost-effectiveness of the interventions based on health care utilization data collected every 2 months from each participant and observed incidence of the endpoints. Mechanistic endpoints include change in muscle mass by DXA(arms and legs), change in myostatin levels, and muscle quality (based on MRI).

The interventions are (1) a simple home exercise program (a validated strength-enhancing or a control joint flexibility exercise program) to be performed 3x30 minutes/week; and (2) protein supplementation (either 20g of whey protein or isocaloric powder given in two portions for breakfast and dinner each day). All participants will receive a control dose of 24'000 IU vitamin D per month (equivalent to 800 IU vitamin D/day) to ensure that over 97% of STRONG participants will be vitamin D replete (25-hydroxyvitamin D \> 20 ng/ml) during the course of the trial.

The trial will have clinical visits at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months. In between clinical visits, telephone interviews will be performed every 2 months.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
801
Inclusion Criteria
  • At least 1 of 5 frailty criteria, definition by Linda Fried: 1) weight loss of > 4.5 kg in the last 12 months; 2) reduced grip strength in Martin Vigorimeter test: ♂ ≤ 64 kPa, ♀ ≤ 42 kPa; 3) standardized question on exhaustion as published by Fried et al.; 4) gait speed < 1 m/s; 5) 6-minute walk test < 300 meters and/or Injurious (any injury) low trauma fall in the last 12 months prior to enrollment
  • Reduced protein intake defined as a score ≤ 0.5 at item K of the Mini Nutritional Assessment (MNA)
  • Community-dwelling or assisted living
Exclusion Criteria
  • Mini-mental state examination (MMSE) < 24 (inability to follow the study procedures and give written informed consent)
  • Inability to come to the trial centers
  • Inability to walk at least 3 meters with or without walking aid
  • Severe kidney impairment (Glomerular filtration rate [GFR] < 30 ml/min)
  • Inability to follow exercise instruction or inability to take protein powder mixed in drink or food (test at baseline screening examination)
  • Severe gait impairment or diseases with a risk of recurrent falling (due to conditions such as, e.g. Parkinson's disease/syndrome, Hemiplegia after stroke, symptomatic stenosis of the spinal canal, polyneuropathy, epilepsy, recurring vertigo, recurring syncope)
  • Major visual or hearing impairment or other serious illness that would preclude participation (e.g. alcohol abuse, alcoholic disease)
  • Inability to read/speak/write in German (necessary to follow instructions incl. STRONG exercise manual)
  • Living in a nursing home
  • Contraindication to treatment (e.g. allergy)
  • Contraindication to the vitamin D standard of care therapy

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Protein-free Supplement plus Active ExerciseActive ExerciseParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of a protein-free, isocaloric powder blend and perform a simple home exercise strength program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein Supplement plus Active ExerciseProtein SupplementParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of L-leucine-enriched whey protein isolate powder (equivalent to 20 g of Protein) and perform a simple home exercise strength program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein Supplement plus Control ExerciseControl ExerciseParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of L-leucine-enriched whey protein isolate powder (equivalent to 20 g of Protein) and perform a joint flexibility home exercise program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein-free Supplement plus Active ExerciseProtein-free SupplementParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of a protein-free, isocaloric powder blend and perform a simple home exercise strength program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein-free Supplement plus Control ExerciseControl ExerciseParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of a protein-free, isocaloric powder blend and perform a joint flexibility home exercise program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein Supplement plus Active ExerciseActive ExerciseParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of L-leucine-enriched whey protein isolate powder (equivalent to 20 g of Protein) and perform a simple home exercise strength program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein Supplement plus Control ExerciseProtein SupplementParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of L-leucine-enriched whey protein isolate powder (equivalent to 20 g of Protein) and perform a joint flexibility home exercise program (3x30 minutes/week)
Protein-free Supplement plus Control ExerciseProtein-free SupplementParticipants will ingest twice daily 23.7 g of a protein-free, isocaloric powder blend and perform a joint flexibility home exercise program (3x30 minutes/week)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of falling12 months

The circumstances and injuries associated with the fall will be ascertained with a questionnaire.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Proportion of seniors with any falls and injurious fallsevery 2 months over 12 months

using the same method as for the primary endpoint

Proportion of seniors admitted to nursing homes (loss of autonomy)every 2 months over 12 months

participants will be asked at visits/phone calls

Change in muscle mass (arms and legs)Baseline, 6, and 12 months

will be measured with IDXA machines (intelligent dual x-ray absorptiometry by GE Healthcare)

Change in gait speedBaseline, 6, and 12 months

Gait speed will be measured over a distance of 4 meters. The participants will be asked to walk in their usual pace

Change in quality of lifeBaseline, 6, and 12 months

will be assessed using the German Version of EuroQuol EQ5D-3L questionnaire according to the Austrian reference scale

Functional decline (change in lower extremity function)Baseline, 6, and 12 months

will be assessed with the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB)

Change in grip strengthBaseline, 6, and 12 months

Measured with Martin Vigorimeter

Change in aerobic capacityBaseline, 6, and 12 months

Aerobic capacity will be assessed with the 6 minute walk test. A walked distance of \< 300 m will be used as a frailty criteria

Proportion of seniors with established frailtyBaseline, 6, and 12 months

Frailty will be defined as 3 out of the following 5 criteria are met: 1) weight loss of \> 4.5 kg in the last 12 months; 2) reduced grip strength in Martin Vigorimeter test: ♂ ≤ 64 kPa, ♀ ≤ 42 kPa; 3) standardized question on exhaustion as published by Fried et al.; 4) gait speed \< 1 m/s; 5) 6-minute walk test \< 300 meters

Proportion of seniors with sarcopeniaBaseline, 6, and 12 months

will be assessed both with the Baumgartner definition (muscle mass alone) and the European Working Group definition by Cruz-Jentoft24 (composite definition of muscle mass and impaired grip strength or gait speed)

Change in reaction timeBaseline, 6, and 12 months

Reaction time will be assessed with repeated chair stands (5 repeats as part of the SPPB)

Change in bone mineral density (hip and lumbar spine)Baseline and 12 months

will be measured with IDXA machines (intelligent dual x-ray absorptiometry by GE Healthcare)

Change in physical activityBaseline, 6, and 12 months

will be assessed by an excerpt from the Nurses' Health Study (NHS) questionnaire

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Centre on Aging and Mobility, University of Zurich and City Hospital Waid and Triemli

🇨🇭

Zurich, ZH, Switzerland

University Geriatric Medicine Felix Platter, Basel

🇨🇭

Basel, Switzerland

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