Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol
Abstract Background Patients on dialysis are physically inactive, with most reporting activity levels below the fifth percentile of healthy age-matched groups. Several small studies have reported efficacy of diverse exercise interventions among persons with CKD and those on dialysis. However, no sin...
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doaj-c18557af88d6420cb82a49d9b4da322d2020-11-24T22:08:11ZengBMCBMC Nephrology1471-23692018-09-0119111210.1186/s12882-018-1032-0Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocolRam Jagannathan0Susan Lynn Ziolkowski1Mary Beth Weber2Jason Cobb3Nhat Pham4Jin Long5Shuchi Anand6Felipe Lobelo7Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory UniversityDivision of Nephrology, Stanford University School of MedicineHubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory UniversityRenal Division, Department of Medicine, Emory University School of MedicineDivision of Nephrology, Santa Clara Valley Medical CenterDivision of Nephrology, Stanford University School of MedicineDivision of Nephrology, Stanford University School of MedicineHubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory UniversityAbstract Background Patients on dialysis are physically inactive, with most reporting activity levels below the fifth percentile of healthy age-matched groups. Several small studies have reported efficacy of diverse exercise interventions among persons with CKD and those on dialysis. However, no single intervention has been widely adopted in real-world practice, despite a clear need in this vulnerable population with high rates of mortality, frailty, and skilled nursing hospitalizations. Methods/design We describe a pragmatic clinical trial for an exercise intervention among patients transitioning to dialysis. We will use an existing framework – Exercise is Medicine (EIM) – developed by the American College of Sports Medicine. After undertaking formative qualitative research to tailor the EIM framework to the advanced CKD population (eGFR < 30 ml/min/1.73m2), we will randomize 96 patients from two regions—Atlanta and Bay Area—in two intervention arms with incremental levels of clinical-community integration: physical activity assessment during Nephrology clinical visit, brief counseling at pre-dialysis education, and physical activity wearable (group 1) versus group 1 intervention components plus a referral to a free, EIM practitioner-led group exercise program over 16 weeks (group 2; 8 week core intervention; 8-week follow up). We will assess efficacy by comparing between group differences in minutes/week of objectively measured moderate intensity physical activity. To evaluate implementation, we will use questionnaires for assessing barriers to referral, participation and retention along the path of the intervention. Further we will have a plan for dissemination of the intervention by partnering with relevant stakeholders. Discussion The overall goal is to inform the development of a practical, cost-conscious intervention “package” that addresses barriers and challenges to physical activity commonly faced by patients with advanced CKD and can be disseminated amongst interested practices. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (Dated:10/17/2017): NCT03311763.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12882-018-1032-0Chronic kidney diseaseExercise is medicineInterventionPhysical activityQualitative interviewsEstimated glomerular filteration rate |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ram Jagannathan Susan Lynn Ziolkowski Mary Beth Weber Jason Cobb Nhat Pham Jin Long Shuchi Anand Felipe Lobelo |
spellingShingle |
Ram Jagannathan Susan Lynn Ziolkowski Mary Beth Weber Jason Cobb Nhat Pham Jin Long Shuchi Anand Felipe Lobelo Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol BMC Nephrology Chronic kidney disease Exercise is medicine Intervention Physical activity Qualitative interviews Estimated glomerular filteration rate |
author_facet |
Ram Jagannathan Susan Lynn Ziolkowski Mary Beth Weber Jason Cobb Nhat Pham Jin Long Shuchi Anand Felipe Lobelo |
author_sort |
Ram Jagannathan |
title |
Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol |
title_short |
Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol |
title_full |
Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol |
title_fullStr |
Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol |
title_full_unstemmed |
Physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “Exercise is Medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (EIM-CKD trial) protocol |
title_sort |
physical activity promotion for patients transitioning to dialysis using the “exercise is medicine” framework: a multi-center randomized pragmatic trial (eim-ckd trial) protocol |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Nephrology |
issn |
1471-2369 |
publishDate |
2018-09-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Patients on dialysis are physically inactive, with most reporting activity levels below the fifth percentile of healthy age-matched groups. Several small studies have reported efficacy of diverse exercise interventions among persons with CKD and those on dialysis. However, no single intervention has been widely adopted in real-world practice, despite a clear need in this vulnerable population with high rates of mortality, frailty, and skilled nursing hospitalizations. Methods/design We describe a pragmatic clinical trial for an exercise intervention among patients transitioning to dialysis. We will use an existing framework – Exercise is Medicine (EIM) – developed by the American College of Sports Medicine. After undertaking formative qualitative research to tailor the EIM framework to the advanced CKD population (eGFR < 30 ml/min/1.73m2), we will randomize 96 patients from two regions—Atlanta and Bay Area—in two intervention arms with incremental levels of clinical-community integration: physical activity assessment during Nephrology clinical visit, brief counseling at pre-dialysis education, and physical activity wearable (group 1) versus group 1 intervention components plus a referral to a free, EIM practitioner-led group exercise program over 16 weeks (group 2; 8 week core intervention; 8-week follow up). We will assess efficacy by comparing between group differences in minutes/week of objectively measured moderate intensity physical activity. To evaluate implementation, we will use questionnaires for assessing barriers to referral, participation and retention along the path of the intervention. Further we will have a plan for dissemination of the intervention by partnering with relevant stakeholders. Discussion The overall goal is to inform the development of a practical, cost-conscious intervention “package” that addresses barriers and challenges to physical activity commonly faced by patients with advanced CKD and can be disseminated amongst interested practices. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov identifier (Dated:10/17/2017): NCT03311763. |
topic |
Chronic kidney disease Exercise is medicine Intervention Physical activity Qualitative interviews Estimated glomerular filteration rate |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12882-018-1032-0 |
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