Design and methods of the StepByStep randomized trial of a mobile health and social media physical activity intervention among adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer: A report from the Children's Oncology Group

IF 2 3区 医学 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Leah J. Beight , Jason A. Mendoza , Wendy M. Leisenring , Willem Collier , Margaret E. Olsen , Wilhelmenia L. Ross , Yaiomy Santiago-Rivera , Stacy Bryant , Jaime Rotatori , Kirsten K. Ness , Alejandra Hurtado-de-Mendoza , K. Scott Baker , Eric J. Chow , Nina S. Kadan-Lottick
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Interventions to increase physical activity are needed in adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer who are largely inactive but at lifelong elevated risk of multiple chronic conditions improved by physical activity. The goals of the StepByStep study are to evaluate the effects of a 48-week distance-based, multi-component mobile health and social media behavioral intervention on physical activity, biomarkers of cardiometabolic health, and health-related quality of life.

Methods

This ongoing study is a two-arm, prospective, multi-site randomized controlled trial. 384 childhood cancer survivors age ≥ 15 years and < 21 years who were 3–36 months off therapy and not meeting physical activity guidelines were enrolled. The trial will test the efficacy of a 24-week intensive multi-component physical activity intervention combining a wearable physical activity tracker, social media peer support group, and individualized goal setting followed by a 24-week maintenance phase of the intervention to improve outcomes. The control group receives the wearable physical activity tracker only.

Conclusion

There is a growing need for novel, developmentally appropriate interventions to increase physical activity and improve the health trajectory of adolescent and young adult survivors of childhood cancer. If efficacious, this portable and scalable intervention would be a much-needed tool to reduce the morbidity from cancer treatment and improve quality of life among survivors after treatment ends.

Clinical trial registration

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04089358; COG Identifier: ALTE2031.

StepByStep 随机试验的设计与方法:对青少年和年轻的儿童癌症幸存者进行移动健康和社交媒体体育锻炼干预:儿童肿瘤小组的报告
背景儿童癌症的青少年和年轻成人幸存者大多不爱运动,但他们终身患多种慢性疾病的风险较高,因此需要采取干预措施来增加他们的体育锻炼。StepByStep 研究的目标是评估为期 48 周、基于距离的多成分移动健康和社交媒体行为干预对体育锻炼、心脏代谢健康的生物标志物以及与健康相关的生活质量的影响。384名年龄≥15岁和21岁的儿童癌症幸存者参加了该试验,他们已接受治疗3-36个月,但未达到体育锻炼指南的要求。该试验将测试为期 24 周的多成分体育锻炼强化干预的疗效,该干预结合了可穿戴体育锻炼跟踪器、社交媒体同伴支持小组和个性化目标设定,随后是为期 24 周的干预维持阶段,以改善疗效。对照组只接受可穿戴体力活动追踪器。结论现在越来越需要新颖的、适合发展的干预措施来增加体力活动,改善青少年和年轻的儿童癌症幸存者的健康状况。临床试验注册ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:临床试验注册ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04089358; COG Identifier:ALTE2031。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
4.50%
发文量
281
审稿时长
44 days
期刊介绍: Contemporary Clinical Trials is an international peer reviewed journal that publishes manuscripts pertaining to all aspects of clinical trials, including, but not limited to, design, conduct, analysis, regulation and ethics. Manuscripts submitted should appeal to a readership drawn from disciplines including medicine, biostatistics, epidemiology, computer science, management science, behavioural science, pharmaceutical science, and bioethics. Full-length papers and short communications not exceeding 1,500 words, as well as systemic reviews of clinical trials and methodologies will be published. Perspectives/commentaries on current issues and the impact of clinical trials on the practice of medicine and health policy are also welcome.
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