MRC Epidemiology Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
MRC Epidemiology Unit, School of Clinical Medicine, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
BMJ Open. 2022 Apr 19;12(4):e058103. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058103.
The cost-effectiveness and long-term health impact of behavioural weight management programmes depends on post-treatment weight-loss maintenance. Growing evidence suggests that interventions using acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) could improve long-term weight management. We developed an ACT-based, guided self-help intervention to support adults who have recently completed a behavioural weight loss programme. This study will assess the feasibility and acceptability of this type of intervention and findings will inform the development of a full-scale trial.
This is a pragmatic, randomised, single-blind, parallel group, two-arm, feasibility study with an embedded process evaluation. We will recruit and randomise 60 adults who have recently completed a behavioural weight loss programme to the ACT-based intervention or standard care, using a computer-generated sequence with 2:1 allocation stratified by diabetes status and sex. Baseline and 6-month measurements will be completed using online questionnaires. Qualitative interviews will be conducted with a subsample of participants and coaches about their experiences at 3 (mid-intervention) and 6 (postintervention) months. Feasibility and acceptability of the intervention, and a full-scale trial will be assessed using a number of outcomes, including adherence to, and engagement with the intervention, recruitment and retention rates, proportion of missing data for each outcome measure, participants' experiences of the intervention and study, and coaches' experiences of delivering intervention support. Quantitative and qualitative findings will be integrated and summarised to contribute to the interpretation of the main feasibility evaluation findings. Value of information methods will be used to estimate the decision uncertainty associated with the intervention's cost-effectiveness and determine the value of a definitive trial.
Ethical approval was received from Cambridge South Research Ethics Committee on 15/03/2021 (21/EE/0024). This protocol (V.2) was approved on 19 April 2021. Findings will be published in peer-reviewed scientific journals and communicated to other stakeholders as appropriate.
ISRCTN12685964.
行为体重管理计划的成本效益和长期健康影响取决于治疗后的体重维持情况。越来越多的证据表明,使用接受与承诺疗法(ACT)的干预措施可以改善长期体重管理。我们开发了一种基于 ACT 的、有指导的自助干预措施,以支持最近完成行为减肥计划的成年人。本研究将评估这种干预措施的可行性和可接受性,研究结果将为全面试验的开展提供信息。
这是一项实用的、随机的、单盲的、平行组、两臂、可行性研究,嵌入了一个过程评估。我们将招募并随机分配 60 名最近完成行为减肥计划的成年人,将他们分为基于 ACT 的干预组或标准护理组,使用计算机生成的序列,2:1 分配,按糖尿病状态和性别分层。基线和 6 个月的测量将通过在线问卷完成。将对参与者和教练的一小部分进行定性访谈,了解他们在 3 个月(干预中期)和 6 个月(干预后)时的体验。使用多项结果评估干预的可行性和可接受性,以及全面试验,包括对干预的依从性和参与度、招募和保留率、每个结果测量的缺失数据比例、参与者对干预和研究的体验以及教练提供干预支持的经验。定量和定性结果将进行整合和总结,有助于解释主要可行性评估结果。价值信息方法将用于估计与干预的成本效益相关的决策不确定性,并确定确定性试验的价值。
剑桥南部研究伦理委员会于 2021 年 3 月 15 日(21/EE/0024)批准了伦理审查。本方案(V.2)于 2021 年 4 月 19 日获得批准。研究结果将发表在同行评议的科学期刊上,并酌情传达给其他利益相关者。
ISRCTN81146354。