Hawkins M A W, Colaizzi Janna, Gunstad John, Hughes Joel W, Mullins Larry L, Betts Nancy, Smith Caitlin E, Keirns Natalie G, Vohs Kathleen D, Moore Shirley M, Forman Evan M, Lovallo William R
Department of Psychology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, United States.
Department of Psychology, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK, United States.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2018 Mar;66:20-27. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2017.12.010. Epub 2017 Dec 22.
Obesity is a global epidemic, yet successful interventions are rare. Up to 60% of people fail to achieve clinically meaningful, short-term weight loss (5-10% of start weight), whereas up to 72% are unsuccessful at achieving long-term weight loss (5-10% loss for ≥5years). Understanding how biological, cognitive, and self-regulatory factors work together to promote or to impede weight loss is clearly needed to optimize obesity treatment. This paper describes the methodology of the Cognitive and Self-regulatory Mechanisms of Obesity Study (the COSMOS trial). COSMOS is the first randomized controlled trial to investigate how changes in multiple biopsychosocial and cognitive factors relate to weight loss and one another across two weight loss treatments. The specific aims are to: 1) Confirm that baseline obesity-related physiological dysregulation is linked to cognitive deficits and poorer self-regulation, 2) Evaluate pre- to post-treatment change across time to assess individual differences in biomarkers, cognition, and self-regulation, and 3) Evaluate whether the acceptance-based treatment (ABT) group has greater improvements in outcomes (e.g., greater weight loss and less weight regain, improvements in biomarkers, cognition, and self-regulation), than the standard behavioral treatment group (SBT) from pre- to post-treatment and 1-year follow-up. The results of COSMOS will provide critical information about how dysregulation in biomarkers, cognition, and/or self-regulation is related to weight loss and whether weight loss treatments are differentially associated with these factors. This information will be used to identify promising treatment targets that are informed by biological, cognitive, and self-regulatory factors in order to advance obesity treatment.
肥胖是一种全球性的流行病,但成功的干预措施却很少见。高达60%的人未能实现具有临床意义的短期体重减轻(起始体重的5%-10%),而高达72%的人未能实现长期体重减轻(≥5年减轻5%-10%)。显然,为了优化肥胖治疗,需要了解生物、认知和自我调节因素如何共同作用以促进或阻碍体重减轻。本文描述了肥胖研究的认知和自我调节机制(COSMOS试验)的方法。COSMOS是第一项随机对照试验,旨在研究多种生物心理社会和认知因素的变化如何与两种减肥治疗中的体重减轻以及彼此之间的关系。具体目标是:1)确认基线时与肥胖相关的生理失调与认知缺陷和较差的自我调节有关;2)评估治疗前到治疗后的变化,以评估生物标志物、认知和自我调节方面的个体差异;3)评估基于接受的治疗(ABT)组在治疗前到治疗后以及1年随访期间,在结局方面(如更大的体重减轻和更少的体重反弹、生物标志物、认知和自我调节的改善)是否比标准行为治疗组(SBT)有更大的改善。COSMOS的结果将提供关于生物标志物、认知和/或自我调节失调如何与体重减轻相关,以及减肥治疗是否与这些因素存在差异关联的关键信息。这些信息将用于确定由生物、认知和自我调节因素提供依据的有前景的治疗靶点,以推进肥胖治疗。