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基层医疗中肥胖症的筛查与简短干预:一项平行双臂随机试验。

Screening and brief intervention for obesity in primary care: a parallel, two-arm, randomised trial.

作者信息

Aveyard Paul, Lewis Amanda, Tearne Sarah, Hood Kathryn, Christian-Brown Anna, Adab Peymane, Begh Rachna, Jolly Kate, Daley Amanda, Farley Amanda, Lycett Deborah, Nickless Alecia, Yu Ly-Mee, Retat Lise, Webber Laura, Pimpin Laura, Jebb Susan A

机构信息

Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, Oxford, UK.

School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.

出版信息

Lancet. 2016 Nov 19;388(10059):2492-2500. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(16)31893-1. Epub 2016 Oct 24.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Obesity is a common cause of non-communicable disease. Guidelines recommend that physicians screen and offer brief advice to motivate weight loss through referral to behavioural weight loss programmes. However, physicians rarely intervene and no trials have been done on the subject. We did this trial to establish whether physician brief intervention is acceptable and effective for reducing bodyweight in patients with obesity.

METHODS

In this parallel, two-arm, randomised trial, patients who consulted 137 primary care physicians in England were screened for obesity. Individuals could be enrolled if they were aged at least 18 years, had a body-mass index of at least 30 kg/m (or at least 25 kg/m if of Asian ethnicity), and had a raised body fat percentage. At the end of the consultation, the physician randomly assigned participants (1:1) to one of two 30 s interventions. Randomisation was done via preprepared randomisation cards labelled with a code representing the allocation, which were placed in opaque sealed envelopes and given to physicians to open at the time of treatment assignment. In the active intervention, the physician offered referral to a weight management group (12 sessions of 1 h each, once per week) and, if the referral was accepted, the physician ensured the patient made an appointment and offered follow-up. In the control intervention, the physician advised the patient that their health would benefit from weight loss. The primary outcome was weight change at 12 months in the intention-to-treat population, which was assessed blinded to treatment allocation. We also assessed asked patients' about their feelings on discussing their weight when they have visited their general practitioner for other reasons. Given the nature of the intervention, we did not anticipate any adverse events in the usual sense, so safety outcomes were not assessed. This trial is registered with the ISRCTN Registry, number ISRCTN26563137.

FINDINGS

Between June 4, 2013, and Dec 23, 2014, we screened 8403 patients, of whom 2728 (32%) were obese. Of these obese patients, 2256 (83%) agreed to participate and 1882 were eligible, enrolled, and included in the intention-to-treat analysis, with 940 individuals in the support group and 942 individuals in the advice group. 722 (77%) individuals assigned to the support intervention agreed to attend the weight management group and 379 (40%) of these individuals attended, compared with 82 (9%) participants who were allocated the advice intervention. In the entire study population, mean weight change at 12 months was 2·43 kg with the support intervention and 1·04 kg with the advice intervention, giving an adjusted difference of 1·43 kg (95% CI 0·89-1·97). The reactions of the patients to the general practitioners' brief interventions did not differ significantly between the study groups in terms of appropriateness (adjusted odds ratio 0·89, 95% CI 0·75-1·07, p=0·21) or helpfulness (1·05, 0·89-1·26, p=0·54); overall, four (<1%) patients thought their intervention was inappropriate and unhelpful and 1530 (81%) patients thought it was appropriate and helpful.

INTERPRETATION

A behaviourally-informed, very brief, physician-delivered opportunistic intervention is acceptable to patients and an effective way to reduce population mean weight.

FUNDING

The UK National Prevention Research Initiative.

摘要

背景

肥胖是非传染性疾病的常见病因。指南建议医生进行筛查,并通过转介至行为减肥项目提供简短建议,以促使患者减肥。然而,医生很少进行干预,且尚未针对该主题开展试验。我们进行这项试验是为了确定医生的简短干预对于肥胖患者减轻体重是否可接受且有效。

方法

在这项平行双臂随机试验中,对在英格兰咨询137名初级保健医生的患者进行肥胖筛查。年龄至少18岁、体重指数至少为30 kg/m²(亚洲族裔至少为25 kg/m²)且体脂百分比升高的个体可纳入研究。在咨询结束时,医生将参与者以1:1的比例随机分配至两种30秒干预措施之一。随机化通过预先准备好的标有代表分配代码的随机卡片进行,这些卡片放置在不透明密封信封中,在治疗分配时交给医生打开。在积极干预组中,医生转介患者至体重管理组(共12节课程,每节1小时,每周一次),如果转介被接受,医生确保患者预约并提供随访。在对照干预组中,医生告知患者减肥对其健康有益。主要结局是意向性治疗人群12个月时的体重变化,在对治疗分配不知情的情况下进行评估。我们还询问了患者在因其他原因就诊于全科医生时,对讨论体重的感受。鉴于干预的性质,我们预计不会出现通常意义上的不良事件,因此未评估安全性结局。本试验已在国际标准随机对照试验编号注册库注册,编号为ISRCTN26563137。

结果

在2013年6月4日至2014年12月23日期间,我们筛查了8403名患者,其中2728名(32%)为肥胖患者。在这些肥胖患者中,2256名(83%)同意参与,1882名符合条件、被纳入并进行意向性治疗分析,其中940名在支持组,942名在建议组。分配至支持干预组的722名(77%)个体同意参加体重管理组,其中379名(40%)参加,而分配至建议干预组的有82名(9%)参与者参加。在整个研究人群中,支持干预组12个月时的平均体重变化为2.43 kg,建议干预组为1.04 kg,调整后的差异为1.43 kg(95%CI为0.89 - 1.97)。在研究组之间,患者对全科医生简短干预的反应在适宜性(调整后的优势比为0.89,95%CI为0.75 - 1.07,p = 0.21)或帮助性(1.05,0.89 - 1.26,p = 0.54)方面无显著差异;总体而言,4名(<1%)患者认为他们的干预不合适且无帮助,1530名(81%)患者认为合适且有帮助。

解读

一种基于行为学知识、非常简短的由医生提供的机会性干预对患者是可接受的,且是降低人群平均体重的有效方法。

资助

英国国家预防研究倡议。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/5567/5121130/b93e86f4c42f/gr1.jpg

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