MedPath

Prevention With the Health and Lifestyle Tool

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Type2 Diabetes
Interventions
Behavioral: Lifestyle tool
Registration Number
NCT05006508
Lead Sponsor
Region Skane
Brief Summary

In this study participants will be randomized to use a digital lifestyle tool over three years or to a control group without access to the tool. The investigators will prospectively via clinical registries follow the incidence and development of type 2 diabetes over three years in those using the tool regularly and those in the control group.

Detailed Description

Considerable evidence suggest that lifestyle changes can prevent or delay the onset of type 2 diabetes, and self-care behaviors largely determine HbA1c. Modifiable lifestyle factors have been established as key drivers of disease onset, progression, and prognosis, motivating the use of "lifestyle as medicine".

Digital health tools are increasingly incorporated into diabetes care, and have the potential to improve both behavioral and clinical outcomes on a broad basis. However, low levels of uptake, reduced user engagement over time, and low acceptance among patients, raise concerns about their effectiveness.

The objective or this study is to evaluate a new web-based tool, developed at the University Gothenburg, Sweden, that aims to support patient autonomy and motivation to make sustainable lifestyle changes.

The investigators will test the hypothesis that individuals who have access to the tool get lower incidence of type 2 diabetes or in case they already have diabetes develop improved glucose control compared with control individuals. The participants will complete the Findrisc questionnaire to assess the risk for type 2 diabetes to enable analysis of high-risk individuals.

The study is an investigator-initiated single-center study conducted over three years.

The tool is web-based and used via a computer or mobile phone. It is used at each individual's preferred pace but participants are recommended to login at least every other week. Every round the participants choose a themes (out of appr. 80 possible covering e.g. food, exercise, stress, self-reflection aspects), which takes appr. 15-30 minutes to complete. Participants then reflect on the content and how it could be implemented in daily life. When returning for next round participants are asked to reflect on any changes done since last time. There is no interaction between individual participants.

There will be two primary endpoints:

1. Incidence of type 2 diabetes as measured in non-diabetic participants with increased risk for type 2 diabetes (controls vs. those using the tool regularly)

2. Change of HbA1c, reflecting long-term blood glucose control, from baseline to end of follow-up in participants who have type 2 diabetes (controls vs. those using the tool regularly).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
77000
Inclusion Criteria
  • informed consent
  • Age above 35 years
Exclusion Criteria
  • type 1 diabetes, MODY or secondary diabetes
  • conditions or treatments that in the judgement of the Investigator could affect the study evaluation
  • connection with the study team, funders, authorities, universities or other public or private bodies in such a way that specific interests in the study outcomes could be suspected.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Usage of toolLifestyle toolParticipants get access to the tool and use it regularly
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Incidence of type 2 diabetes3 years

Incidence of type 2 diabetes defined as random plasma glucose \>11.1 mmol/L or fasting glucose \>7.0 mmol/L or HbA1C ≥6.5% compared between participants regularly using the tool and on usual care.

Change of long-term blood glucose concentration measured as glycated hemoglobin at end of follow-up3 years

Intraindividual change of long-term blood glucose concentration measured as glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) at end of follow-up relative to baseline compared between participants regularly using the tool and on usual care.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change of Anxiety estimated by General Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale1 year

Change of Anxiety estimated by General Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale relative to baseline compared between participants regularly using the tool and on usual care. Score is from 0 to 21 with 21 meaning highest anxiety

Change of Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item scale1 year

Change of Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item scale relative to baseline compared between participants regularly using the tool and on usual care. Score is from 0 to 27 with 27 meaning highest sign of depression

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Anders Rosengrentest

🇸🇪

Malmö, Skane, Sweden

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath