Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Active, not recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
85

Summary

Conditions
Prediabetes
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentIntervention Model Description: Participants will engage in EFT or control while using The Traffic Light Diet, The Traffic Light Activity Program, and a variety of behavioral techniques including stimulus control, self-monitoring, goal setting, problem solving, resetting rewarding mechanisms by reducing need for immediate gratification, finding behavioral substitutes for highly reinforcing food.Masking: Single (Outcomes Assessor)Masking Description: Research personnel who will be conducting assessment sessions, including weight measurements, will not be informed of participant's group assignmentPrimary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 70 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Participants in both groups will first attend weekly group meetings followed by monthly group meetings for up to 6 months. They will be provided general information on healthy diet, physical activity and medication adherence that the investigators will develop combining strengths of the investigator...

Participants in both groups will first attend weekly group meetings followed by monthly group meetings for up to 6 months. They will be provided general information on healthy diet, physical activity and medication adherence that the investigators will develop combining strengths of the investigators well validated family-based behavioral treatment for obesity and the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) lifestyle intervention for prediabetes. The behavioral treatment (BT) is a rigorously tested, multi-component intervention that targets diet, activity, and behavioral skills. The treatment will include: 1) a modified version of the Traffic Light Diet, which utilizes RED, YELLOW, GREEN labels for food to guide participants toward the goal of consuming low energy dense, low glycemic, high nutrient dense foods; 2) the Traffic Light Activity Program, which also utilizes RED, YELLOW and GREEN labels for different levels of caloric expenditure, and 3) a variety of behavioral techniques, including stimulus control, self-monitoring, goal setting, problem solving, resetting rewarding mechanisms by reducing need for immediate gratification, finding behavioral substitutes for highly reinforcing food, and EFT. The investigators have used a traffic light-based intervention in combination with EFT in a pilot study to demonstrate therapeutic effects of EFT on BMI and dietary intake beyond the effects of BT alone. During treatment meetings, participants will be weighed and have a 30-60 minute group session (up to 20 per group) either preceded or followed by an individualized session with an interventionist. The group sessions review information about weight loss and maintenance and engage in group problem solving for participants who are struggling with behavior change. During the individual meeting with their interventionist, participants are taught behavior change techniques and review and address diet and activity self-monitoring and any barriers to adherence with the weight-loss behaviors. A study website will be developed that will be used to provide information about the intervention, downloadable manuals for the Traffic Light Diet and Activity Program, manage the EFT component of the intervention, and provide tools for cooking, and getting more physical activity. Quizzes to assess mastery of educational materials will be implemented on the study website, with multiple versions of quizzes on each module available to account for those participants who will acquire the information more slowly than others. Participants will have access to traditional paper and pencil self-monitoring, and consistent with current implementation of BT, after self-monitoring skill is acquired, participants can choose to use traditional or technology-based recording. Participants will have access to the study website for feedback, and interventionists will have access to the website to assess patient progress, assist with problem solving and to communicate with participants to structure solutions. The website will also contain password protected sections that are for internal use by study personnel. This section will be a repository for study documents and a communications hub for the study. The website will not contain protected health information. Participants in both groups will meet with an interventionist to review progress. One group will be trained to implement EFT using the ecological momentary intervention (EMI) computer based program that the investigators have developed. This program can be accessed by smartphone, tablet or computer. This application stores self-generated EFT cues, prompts their use, asks questions about use, and records their use. EFT training will include developing individualized future event cues to use in implementing EFT in the natural environment. In the control group, participants may use non-future cues, recall previous events, and not use prospection. Cues are stimuli that prompt engaging in EFT. Cues can be signs, reminder cards, audio cues, or physical cues. Subjects will practice using these cues and learn to envision that the "future is now" when making decisions in the laboratory as they are engaged in a variety of DD and food decision training tasks such as the opportunity to have a very enticing snack now or larger portions of healthier food later, earning a small amount of money now or more later, etc. In this way, participants will learn to generate episodic future cues and practice EFT skills in situations where they usually would choose the more immediate reward. Episodic future cues may include audio and written cues that can be accessed during tempting situations in the natural environment. During individual sessions interventionists will review habit changes and medication adherence, and use of EFT. In the control group participants will use the cues to recall previous behaviors and not use prospection, but will otherwise engage in the same tasks. Participants in both groups will be weighed at the beginning of each session, and height will also be collected at baseline. Data to be collected at baseline, 3 and 6 months include delay discounting tasks, working memory, measures of medication and behavioral adherence, weight, glycemic control, blood pressure and cholesterol, eating and activity.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT03670602
Collaborators
  • Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
  • National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Leonard H Epstein, PhD State University of New York at Buffalo Principal Investigator: Warren K Bickel, PhD Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University