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Clinical Trials/NCT07560969
NCT07560969
Not yet recruiting
Not Applicable

Addressing Food Access and Physical Activity to Improve Diabetes Prevention Outcomes Among Underserved African Americans

University of Missouri, Kansas City1 site in 1 country408 target enrollmentStarted: January 4, 2027Last updated:

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Status
Not yet recruiting
Enrollment
408
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Weight loss

Overview

Brief Summary

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if an enhanced, culturally, socially, and structurally tailored Diabetes Prevention Program (E-DPP) can improve weight loss and related diabetes risk factors in African American adults with prediabetes living in low-income, socially vulnerable communities.

The main questions it aims to answer are:

  • Does the enhanced DPP (E-DPP) lead to greater percent weight loss at 6 and 12 months compared to the standard culturally tailored DPP (S-DPP)?
  • How do social determinants (e.g., food insecurity, stigma, access to resources) influence weight loss and engagement in lifestyle behaviors?

Researchers will compare a standard culturally tailored DPP (S-DPP) to an enhanced DPP (E-DPP) to see if improving access to healthy food, physical activity, and community resources increases weight loss and improves diabetes-related outcomes.

Participants will

  1. Attend DPP sessions delivered in community settings (e.g., churches)
  2. Receive lifestyle education focused on diet, physical activity, and weight loss
  3. Engage in physical activity (including in-class exercise sessions [E-DPP only] and community-based options)
  4. Receive support for healthy eating, including food deliveries ([E-DPP only]), food selection guidance, and referrals to food assistance programs
  5. Receive information and support for accessing community resources for food and physical activity

Detailed Description

This study is a cluster-randomized clinical trial designed to evaluate the effectiveness of an enhanced, culturally, socially, and structurally tailored Diabetes Prevention Program (E-DPP) compared to a standard culturally tailored DPP (S-DPP) among African American adults with prediabetes residing in low-income, socially vulnerable communities. The trial will enroll approximately 408 participants across 12 community-based sites (churches), which will be randomized to deliver either S-DPP or E-DPP to minimize contamination across intervention conditions.

Both intervention arms are grounded in the evidence-based DPP lifestyle intervention and incorporate cultural tailoring strategies to improve relevance and acceptability in African American communities. The enhanced intervention builds upon this foundation by explicitly addressing multilevel social determinants that influence engagement in healthy eating and physical activity. Specifically, E-DPP integrates structural supports to improve access to healthy foods and safe, low-cost physical activity opportunities, alongside strategies to address social stigma related to obesity, poverty, and food insecurity.

The E-DPP includes additional components delivered during and between sessions. These include provision of fruits and vegetables during sessions, experiential activities focused on healthy food selection and budgeting, and facilitated linkage to community food resources such as food pantries and assistance programs. Physical activity support includes structured in-session exercise and guidance on accessing community-based physical activity programs. Participants in the E-DPP arm will also receive tailored text messaging designed to reinforce behavior change, promote utilization of community resources, and reduce stigma-related barriers to engagement.

The intervention is delivered over a 12-month period, with assessments conducted at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months. A community-engaged approach informs intervention design and implementation, ensuring alignment with local context and resources. The study is guided by theoretical frameworks that emphasize the role of social and structural determinants in shaping health behaviors and outcomes.

In addition to evaluating intervention effects, the study will examine potential mediators and moderators of weight loss, including social determinant-related stressors, access to resources, and psychosocial factors. A concurrent process evaluation will assess intervention fidelity, dose, participant engagement, acceptability, and feasibility, as well as cost-related considerations. These data will inform identification of key intervention components and support future scalability and dissemination of the enhanced program in underserved communities.

Study Design

Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel
Primary Purpose
Prevention
Masking
None

Eligibility Criteria

Ages
18 Years to — (Adult, Older Adult)
Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Members of a participating church or user of a participating church's outreach services
  • Age 18 years or older
  • Prediabetic (score of 5 or higher in the National Diabetes Prevention Program Risk Score or (\[body mass index \> 24 or history of gestational diabetes\] and (5.7-6.4 A1v, 100-125 mg/dL fasting plasma glucose, or 140-149 mg/dL oral glucose tolerance test)

Exclusion Criteria

  • Individuals who are pregnant, breastfeeding or planning to become pregnant in the next year
  • Individuals with unsafe blood pressure levels (160 systolic or higher or 100 diastolic or higher) without a medical clearance firn
  • Individuals who are not able to engage in low-impact physical activity
  • Individuals who do not speak English
  • Individuals who live in a household with a participant in this study at a different church

Arms & Interventions

Standard Diabetes Prevention Program (S-DPP)

Active Comparator

Standard DPP (S-DPP) is a 12-month, in-person lifestyle intervention based on the CDC PreventT2 curriculum, delivered by community peer coaches across 22 sessions (16 core, 6 maintenance). Coaches conduct pre-program outreach and a pre-session addressing diabetes disparities, goal setting, and attendance barriers. Each session includes weigh-ins with REDCap capture, review of self-monitoring logs for diet, activity, and goals, and guided delivery of the curriculum. Participants receive Wi-Fi scales and fitness trackers to support weight loss and physical activity tracking. Certain sessions provide information on local, low- or no-cost food and physical activity resources to support and maintain behavior change.

Intervention: Culturally-tailored, enhanced adaption of Diabetes Prevention Program (Behavioral)

Enhanced Diabetes Prevention Program (E-DPP)

Experimental

Enhanced DPP (E-DPP) is a 12-month intervention based on the CDC PreventT2 curriculum that integrates digital tools, community resources, and culturally tailored supports across 22 sessions (16 core, 6 maintenance). Coaches conduct pre-program outreach and a pre-session addressing diabetes disparities, goal setting, and attendance barriers. Sessions include weigh-ins with REDCap capture, review of self-monitoring logs, and guided curriculum delivery. Participants receive Wi-Fi scales and fitness trackers and access tailored text messages with DPP content and resource links. Coaches provide additional messaging support. The model also includes in-class healthy food distribution and culturally tailored physical activity sessions, as well as information on local low- or no-cost resources to support sustained behavior change.

Intervention: Culturally-tailored, enhanced adaption of Diabetes Prevention Program (Behavioral)

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Weight loss

Time Frame: Baseline, 6 months, 12 months

Percent weight loss measured as percent change in weight (in pounds) from baseline at 6 and 12 months

Secondary Outcomes

  • Nutrition security(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Dietary intake(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • DPP Attendance(6 months)
  • Physical activity (subjective)(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Physical activity (objective)(Baseline, 6 months)
  • Use of community resources for food access(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Use of community resources for physical activity(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Blood pressure(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Glycosylated hemoglobin(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)
  • Food security(Baseline, 6 months, 12 months)

Investigators

Sponsor Class
Other
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Jenifer Allsworth

Associate Professor

University of Missouri, Kansas City

Study Sites (1)

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