MedPath

Image Based Mobile System for Dietary Assessment and Coaching

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Cardiovascular Diseases
Interventions
Behavioral: Mediterranean Diet - Remote Coaching using a Mobile App
Registration Number
NCT03897426
Lead Sponsor
Vibrent Health
Brief Summary

Vignet partnered with The George Washington University Hospital to conduct a randomized control trial (RCT) with to evaluate the system's potential to improve health outcomes for patients with CVD. Results from the RCT have the potential to be applied to patients in other chronic disease contexts.

Detailed Description

84 million American adults (\>1 in 3) have cardiovascular disease, and cardiovascular disease accounts for 1 of every 3 deaths in the United States and has been the number one cause of deaths in every year since 1918. In addition, strokes, heart attacks, and uncontrolled hypertension are sources of significant disability. However, with control of known cardiovascular risk factors (i.e., smoking, body mass index, physical activity, healthy diet, total cholesterol, blood pressure, fasting plasma glucose), the risk of developing cardiovascular disease is markedly reduced. The most uncontrolled risk factor of these seven metrics for cardiovascular health amongst US adults is healthy dietary behaviors. 73 percent of Americans have a poor diet, and \<1 percent have an ideal diet. No other metric of cardiovascular risk comes close - by comparison, the second worst metric is body mass index for which 31 percent have an ideal score, and the remaining five risk factors are all greater than 40 percent with ideal control. The magnitude of the gap that needs closure is greatest with healthy dietary behaviors, yet it frequently receives the least amount of intervention, and the gap has worsened over the past quarter century. Fewer patients with hypertension today are adhering to healthy nutritional habits than patients a quarter century ago. These suboptimal dietary habits are the leading cause of mortality and disability-adjusted life-years lost, greater than smoking, obesity, physical inactivity, high cholesterol, hypertension, or diabetes.

Lifestyle modification is the cornerstone of cardiovascular disease prevention, and healthy nutritional habits are essential to reducing cardiovascular risk. Changes in diet alone are as effective as blood pressure medications, without side effects associated with pharmacologic intervention. Increase nut consumption lowers cholesterol, and reducing sugar-sweetened beverages reduces risk of weight gain.

More recently, greater attention has been brought to the Mediterranean diet. The Mediterranean diet lowers blood pressure, increases HDL cholesterol, and decreases glucose levels. The term "Mediterranean diet" was first coined by Ancel Keys, best known for the Seven Countries Study, which found lower cardiovascular mortality in Mediterranean vs. non-Mediterranean countries. Since Keys' seminal work, multiple observational studies and randomized controlled trials have demonstrated a diet characterized by abundant olive oil and nut consumption and enriched for fruits, vegetables and fatty fish to be the most likely to reduce risk of cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction, stroke and death. The Mediterranean diet was speculated to have cardiovascular benefit after observational studies suggested benefit, and the evidence solidified after randomized controlled studies showed superiority of the Mediterranean diet in both high-risk primary prevention populations and secondary prevention populations. The PREDIMED study showed a 30 percent reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events, largely through a reduction in stroke, for those patients at high risk for the development of atherosclerotic disease on a Mediterranean diet enriched for olive oil and nut consumption. The Lyon Diet Heart Study enrolled patients after a first myocardial infarction, and those randomized to receiving a Mediterranean diet enriched with more bread, fish, root vegetables and fish had improved survival and fewer myocardial infarctions than those on a usual prudent diet. Neither study demonstrated any adverse effects of the diet. These studies, however, were conducted in Mediterranean countries, and whether this diet can be successfully implemented in a non-Mediterranean population (and whether the benefits would similarly translate) remains to be tested. Observational studies suggest its possibility in a non-Mediterranean population but this finding remains to be confirmed by randomized controlled trial.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
100
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Consecutive patients with ongoing cardiology care with a cardiologist based at the GWU MFA and are expected to remain in the care of that cardiologist for at least 6 months.
  2. Patients must own their own Android- or Apple iOS-based smartphone with a data plan.
  3. Patients must give informed consent.
  4. English language requirement.
  5. At least 5th grade literacy level as assessed with Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine (REALM).[ ]
  6. Patients must demonstrate an ability to download and install the Vignet FitNinja app.
  7. Patient must be at least 18 years of age.
  8. Patient with evidence of prior acute coronary syndrome, history of myocardial infarction, stable or unstable angina, coronary or other arterial revascularization, ischemic non-embolic stroke/TIA, or peripheral artery disease presumed to be of atherosclerotic origin.
  9. Patient is on optimal medical therapy as determined by the primary cardiologist at time of enrollment.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Clinical instability at time of enrollment.
  2. Co-morbid medical disease that would preclude ability to participate in a nutrition intervention study (e.g., digestive disease with fat intolerance, life expectancy less than 5 years, severe neurologic, psychiatric or endocrine abnormalities).
  3. Immunodeficiency or HIV-positive status.
  4. Illegal drug use, alcoholism or daily alcohol intake >80 g/d.
  5. BMI>40 kg/m2.
  6. Inability or unwillingness to change dietary habits as predicted by the Prochaska and DiClemente stages of change model.[ ]
  7. Inability or unwillingness to adhere to a Mediterranean diet (e.g., religious/moral reasons, disorders or chewing or swallowing).
  8. Allergies to major components of the Mediterranean diet (i.e., nuts, olive oil).
  9. Participation in any drug trial or use of any investigational drug within the past one year.
  10. Patients who are institutionalized, lack autonomy, are non-ambulatory, lack a stable address, or have a history of missing more than one appointment in the past 6 months.
  11. Patients with an acute infection or inflammation (e.g., pneumonia) in the past 3 months.
  12. Pregnancy.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention armMediterranean Diet - Remote Coaching using a Mobile AppMediterranean Diet - Remote Coaching using a Mobile App. Patients randomized to the intervention arm were allotted 60 minutes of RD time through a Mobile App (for remote consultation), given an instruction booklet on using Mobile App, directed to a website for additional instruction on its use, and have the app set up to establish connectivity to the RD. Remote coaching by RD was the intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Compare the Mediterranean Diet Compliance Score at 3 months between the intervention and standard of care groups3 months

The primary endpoint is to compare the Mediterranean Diet Compliance Score, on a scale of 0 to 14, at 3 months between the intervention and standard of care groups. Basic comparisons will be made using Wilcoxon tests to compare medians between the two groups with repeated measures analysis of variance used to compare differences across groups and over time. The higher value represents a better outcome. Subscales will not be combined.

Compare the Mediterranean Diet Compliance Score at 6 months between the intervention and standard of care groups6 months

The primary endpoint is to compare the Mediterranean Diet Compliance Score, on a scale of 0 to 14, at 6 months between the intervention and standard of care groups. Basic comparisons will be made using Wilcoxon tests to compare medians between the two groups with repeated measures analysis of variance used to compare differences across groups and over time. The higher value represents a better outcome. Subscales will not be combined.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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