Andonian BrianJ, Ross Leanna M, Zidek Alyssa M, Fos Liezl B, Piner Lucy W, Johnson Johanna L, Belski Kelsey B, Counts Julie D, Pieper Carl F, Siegler Ilene C, Bales Connie W, Porter Starr Kathryn N, Kraus William E, Huffman Kim M
Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
Duke University School of Medicine and Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, Durham VA Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina.
ACR Open Rheumatol. 2023 May;5(5):252-263. doi: 10.1002/acr2.11536. Epub 2023 Mar 29.
Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) remain at an increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality. RA CVD results from a combination of traditional risk factors and RA-related systemic inflammation. One hypothetical means of improving overall RA CVD risk is through reduction of excess body weight and increased physical activity. Together, weight loss and physical activity can improve traditional cardiometabolic health through fat mass loss, while also improving skeletal muscle health. Additionally, disease-related CVD risk may improve as both fat mass loss and exercise reduce systemic inflammation. To explore this hypothesis, 26 older persons with RA and overweight/obesity will be randomized to 16 weeks of a usual care control arm or to a remotely Supervised Weight Loss Plus Exercise Training (SWET) program. A caloric restriction diet (targeting 7% weight loss) will occur via a dietitian-led intervention, with weekly weigh-ins and group support sessions. Exercise training will consist of both aerobic training (150 minutes/week moderate-to-vigorous exercise) and resistance training (twice weekly). The SWET remote program will be delivered via a combination of video conference, the study YouTube channel, and study mobile applications. The primary cardiometabolic outcome is the metabolic syndrome Z score, calculated from blood pressure, waist circumference, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, and glucose. RA-specific CVD risk will be assessed with measures of systemic inflammation, disease activity, patient-reported outcomes, and immune cell function. The SWET-RA trial will be the first to assess whether a remotely supervised, combined lifestyle intervention improves cardiometabolic health in an at-risk population of older individuals with RA and overweight/obesity.
类风湿关节炎(RA)患者患心血管疾病(CVD)和死亡的风险仍然较高。RA相关的CVD是由传统风险因素和RA相关的全身炎症共同导致的。一种改善整体RA相关CVD风险的假设方法是减轻超重体重并增加身体活动。体重减轻和身体活动共同作用,可以通过减少脂肪量来改善传统的心脏代谢健康,同时还能改善骨骼肌健康。此外,随着脂肪量减少和运动减轻全身炎症,与疾病相关的CVD风险可能会降低。为了探究这一假设,26名患有RA且超重/肥胖的老年人将被随机分为两组,一组接受为期16周的常规护理对照干预,另一组接受远程监督的体重减轻加运动训练(SWET)计划。通过营养师主导的干预措施进行热量限制饮食(目标是减轻7%的体重),每周进行体重测量并组织小组支持会议。运动训练将包括有氧训练(每周150分钟中等至剧烈运动)和阻力训练(每周两次)。SWET远程计划将通过视频会议、研究YouTube频道和研究移动应用程序相结合的方式提供。主要的心脏代谢结局是代谢综合征Z评分,该评分由血压、腰围、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、甘油三酯和血糖计算得出。将通过全身炎症、疾病活动度、患者报告结局和免疫细胞功能的测量来评估RA特异性CVD风险。SWET-RA试验将是首个评估远程监督的联合生活方式干预是否能改善患有RA且超重/肥胖的高危老年人群心脏代谢健康的试验。