The Cooperative Lifestyle Intervention Program-II (CLIP-II): design and methods

Anthony P Marsh, James A Janssen, Walter T Ambrosius, Jonathan H Burdette, Jill E Gaukstern, Ashley R Morgan, Beverly A Nesbit, J Brielle Paolini, Jessica L Sheedy, W Jack Rejeski, Anthony P Marsh, James A Janssen, Walter T Ambrosius, Jonathan H Burdette, Jill E Gaukstern, Ashley R Morgan, Beverly A Nesbit, J Brielle Paolini, Jessica L Sheedy, W Jack Rejeski

Abstract

A complication of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and the metabolic syndrome (MetS) among older adults is loss of mobility. The American Heart Association has identified weight management as a core component of secondary prevention programs for CVD and is an important risk factor for physical disability. The American Society for Nutrition and the Obesity Society have highlighted the need for long-term randomized clinical trials to evaluate the independent and additive effects of diet-induced weight loss (WL) and physical activity in older persons on outcomes such as mobility, muscle function, and obesity related diseases. Here we describe the rationale, design, and methods of a translational study, the Cooperative Lifestyle Intervention Program-II (CLIP-II). CLIP-II will randomize 252 obese, older adults with CVD or MetS to a weight loss only treatment (WL), aerobic exercise training (AT)+WL, or resistance exercise training (RT)+WL for 18 months. The dual primary outcomes are mobility and knee extensor strength. The interventions will be delivered by YMCA community partners with our staff as trainers and advisers. This study will provide the first large scale trial to evaluate the effects of diet-induced WL on mobility in obese, older adults with CVD or MetS as compared to WL combined with two different modes of physical activity (AT and RT). Because uncertainty exists about the best approach for promoting WL in older adults due to concerns with the loss of lean mass, the design also permits a contrast between AT+WL and RT+WL on muscle strength.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01547182.

Keywords: Exercise; Obesity; Older adults; Physical activity; Translational science; Weight loss.

© 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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