Multidomain Intervention to Prevent Disability in Elders
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Physical Frailty
- Sponsor
- Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
- Enrollment
- 210
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- 400-meter walk test
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 8 months ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Prevention of physical disability represents a major priority for the public health system. Physical disability is the final result of a complex cascade of negative events occurring at different levels (i.e., environmental, social, biological, and clinical). The heterogeneity of the underlying mechanisms responsible for the onset of physical disability may require the adoption of preventive interventions affecting multiple domains. Although several studies suggest that single or different combinations of preventive interventions (in particular, physical activity, cognitive training, and healthy diet) might provide beneficial effects in preventing functional loss (and its related features, such as pain or reduced quality of life), very limited evidence coming from clinical trials is currently available on the topic. Intervention trials are usually designed to test the effect of a specific monodimensional intervention on a very selected population, so to reduce the risk of biased results. This approach, although legitimate and methodologically correct, may 1) be insufficient to target the multiple and heterogeneous physiopathological mechanisms underlying the onset of physical disability, and 2) cause a population selection bias leading to difficulties in implementing the study results to the overall older population (thus, determining the "evidence-based medicine" issue in the elderly). To our knowledge, there are no available data from clinical trials evaluating the effects of a multidomain intervention based on lifestyle modifications (e.g., physical activity, cognitive training, nutritional modification) for preventing mobility disability (a very early phase of the disabling process) in community-dwelling older persons. In the present project (Multidomain Intervention to preveNt Disability in ElDers, MINDED), we propose to conduct a pilot study aimed at estimating the effects of a multidomain person-tailored preventive intervention (based on physical activity, cognitive training, and nutritional modifications) on frailty status, physical performance, cognitive function, nutritional status, health-related quality of life, and use of health care services. In addition, we will perform cost-effectiveness analyses of the proposed intervention. The project will yield the necessary preliminary data to design a definitive full-scale Phase 3 randomized clinical trial. By providing a conclusive answer about the effectiveness of a multidimensional preventive program in the primary prevention of major health-related outcomes, the results of the full-scale trial will have relevant clinical and public health implications, and will promote the practicing of a truly evidence-based geriatric medicine.
Investigators
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Age of 60 years and older;
- •Willingness to be randomized to either treatment group;
- •Pre-frailty or frailty status according to the phenotype described by Fried and colleagues
Exclusion Criteria
- •Failure to provide informed consent;
- •Inability to complete a 400-meter walk test (primary outcome of the study);
- •Living in nursing home;
- •Living outside of the area of interest, or planning to move out of the area in next 3 years, or planning to leave the area for more than 3 months during the next year;
- •Relevant cognitive impairment (defined as a known diagnosis of dementia);
- •Severe progressive, degenerative neurologic disease (e.g., multiple sclerosis);
- •Severe rheumatologic or orthopaedic diseases (e.g., awaiting joint replacement);
- •Terminal illness with life expectancy less than 12 months;
- •Severe pulmonary disease (e.g., oxygen therapy or chronic use of steroids);
- •Severe cardiac disease (e.g., New York Heart Association Class III or IV heart failure, clinically significant aortic stenosis, history of cardiac arrest, uncontrolled angina);
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
400-meter walk test
Time Frame: 12 months
Incident inability to complete the 400-meter walk test in the two randomization groups
Secondary Outcomes
- Hospitalizations and institutionalization rates(12 months)
- Intercurrent illnesses rates(12 months)
- Mortality(12 months)
- Body composition modifications(12 months)
- Participants' adherence/retention to the intervention protocol and control groups(12 months)
- Serious fall injuries(12 months)
- Modification of Pain(12 months)
- Fatigue(12 months)
- Health-related quality of life(12 months)