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Nutritional Rehabilitation in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients With Muscle Atrophy

Cost Effectiveness Analysis and Clinical Outcome of Nutritional Rehabilitation on Physical Functioning and Cardiometabolic Risk Profile in COPD Patients With Muscle Atrophy

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01344135
Acronym
NUTRAIN
Enrollment
81
Registered
2011-04-28
Start date
2011-09-30
Completion date
2015-06-30
Last updated
2018-04-30

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Muscular Atrophy

Keywords

Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive, Muscular Atrophy, Nutritional rehabilitation, Counselling

Brief summary

To study in clinically stable Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients with muscle atrophy: 1. The short-term effects of 4 months exercise training including nutritional supplementation versus exercise training alone on physical functioning (skeletal muscle strength and exercise capacity) and body composition. 2. The long-term effects of 4 months of exercise training and nutritional supplementation followed by 8 months of nutritional counseling (with supplementation on advice) and feedback on physical activity level versus 4 months of exercise training and 8 months with feedback on physical activity level alone on physical functioning, body composition and cardiometabolic risk profile; 3. The cost-effectiveness of exercise rehabilitation and nutritional intervention versus exercise rehabilitation alone.

Detailed description

Rationale. Recent guidelines state that pulmonary rehabilitation should be part of integrated care of patients with COPD and not limited to end stage disease. The investigators hypothesize that clinically stable COPD patients muscle atrophy, irrespective of the severity of airflow obstruction, show more pronounced long-term improvement in physical functioning and cardiometabolic risk profile after a rehabilitation programme including nutritional intervention (supplementation and counseling) than after a pulmonary rehabilitation programme without nutritional intervention, at acceptable costs. Nutritional supplementation focuses on enhancing the efficacy of the exercise training. Nutritional counseling aims at maintaining energy balance and modulating cardiovascular disease risk. Study design. The research aims will be addressed in a multi-centre, randomized, clinical trial. Phase A, Rehabilitation (4 months): * Group 1: Supervised exercise training and 3 placebo nutritional supplements daily * Group 2: Supervised exercise training and 3 nutritional supplements daily Phase B, Maintenance (8 months): * Group 1: Exercise counseling (2x) * Group 2: Exercise counseling (2x), nutritional counseling (5x) (and 1 nutritional supplement a day on indication) Phase C, Follow-up (3 months): * Group 1: no intervention * Group 2: 1 nutritional supplement a day on request Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation and benefits. This study aims to tailor pulmonary rehabilitation. Participants of group 1 are visiting their rehabilitation centre 3 times for study related measurements within 15 months (2 times feedback on physical activity, 1 measurement visit). Participants of group 2 will be asked to visit their rehabilitation centre for 6 times (1 measurement visit, 3 times nutritional counseling, 1 time for feedback on physical activity, 1 time for nutritional counseling and feedback on physical activity combined) within 15 months. For both groups baseline measurements and outcome measurements after rehabilitation are already included in the CIRO rehabilitation programme.

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTDietary supplementation

Phase A, Rehabilitation (4 months): 3 nutritional supplements daily Phase B, Maintenance (8 months): nutritional supplementation on advice (1 supplement daily) Phase C, Follow-up (3 months): no supplementation

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTPlacebo supplement

Phase A, Rehabilitation (4 months): 3 placebo nutritional supplements daily Phase B, Maintenance (8 months): No supplementation Phase C, Follow-up (3 months): No supplementation

Phase A, Rehabilitation (4 months): No counselling Phase B, Maintenance (8 months): Nutritional counselling (4x) Phase C, Follow-up (3 months): No counselling Aim: 1. Optimising dietary intake to physical activity pattern and energy expenditure. 2. Minimize deterioration of dietary intake during acute exacerbations. 3. Optimize dietary lipid profile with respect to total fat intake; trans fatty acids and proportion of poly-unsaturated fatty acids to modulate cardiovascular risk and muscle fatty acid metabolism. 4. Increasing adherence/compliance by addressing issues like taste fatigue, gastro-intestinal symptoms, individual preferences and lifestyle.

BEHAVIORALFeedback on physical activity level

Phase A, Rehabilitation (4 months): No exercise counselling Phase B, Maintenance (8 months): Exercise counselling (2x) Phase C, Follow-up (3 months): No exercise counselling Aim: 1. Integration of exercise behaviour into daily routine 2. Improvement of self-regulation skills (e.g. self-monitoring, goal setting, action planning) 3. Increasing adherence/compliance by addressing issues like coping with difficult situation, individual preferences and lifestyle

Sponsors

The Netherlands Asthma Foundation
CollaboratorOTHER
Danone Global Research & Innovation Center
CollaboratorINDUSTRY
Maastricht University Medical Center
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE (Subject, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease * Muscle atrophy (a FFMI under the sex- and age-specific 25th percentile FFMI values, assessed by DEXA) * Eligible for pulmonary rehabilitation

Exclusion criteria

* COPD patients under the age of 18; * Allergy or intolerance to fish, milk or other components of the study product; * Investigator's uncertainty about the willingness or ability of the patient to comply with the protocol requirements; * Not able to stop current supplement use or if total use will be above safe upper limits; * Participation in any other study involving investigational or marketed products concomitantly or within two weeks prior to entry into the study; * Pregnancy; * Life threatening diseases like tuberculosis, carcinoma, AIDS (including HIV+), acute leukaemia etc.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Skeletal muscle strength0, 12 monthsSkeletal muscle strength assessed by isokinetic dynamometry (Biodex®)

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Health related quality of life0, 4, 12, 15 monthsAssessed by: * SGRQ: Saint George Respiratory Questionnaire * SF36: Short Form - 36 * EQ5D: EuroQol 5 domains, extended with energy/fatique domain
Dyspnoea0, 4, 12, 15 monthsAssessed by: -MRC-index: Medical Research Council dyspnoea scale
Body composition0, 4, 12 monthsAssessed by \- DEXA scan
Cardiometabolic risk profile0, 4, 12 months* lipid profile (blood) * systemic inflammatory profile (blood) * blood pressure(hematometer) * HOMA index (blood) * visceral fat mass (DEXA) * AGEs skin (AGE reader)
Plasma levels of supplemented (micro)nutrients0, 4, 12 monthsAssessed by: * Plasma amino acids (leucine) * Vitamin D (plasma calcidiol 25(OH)D )
Bone mass density0, 4, 12 monthsAssessed by: \- DEXA scan
Physical activity0, 4, 12, 15 monthsAssessed by: \- Accelerometry
Exercise capacity0, 4, 12 monthsAssessed by: \- Constant Work Rate Test (CWRT)

Countries

Netherlands

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 14, 2026