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Prevention of Diabetes in African American Communities: Project PROUD Community Trevor Hart, Betty Kennedy, Susan Peterson, Guido Urizar, Ben Van Voorhees,

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Presentation on theme: "Prevention of Diabetes in African American Communities: Project PROUD Community Trevor Hart, Betty Kennedy, Susan Peterson, Guido Urizar, Ben Van Voorhees,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Prevention of Diabetes in African American Communities: Project PROUD Community Trevor Hart, Betty Kennedy, Susan Peterson, Guido Urizar, Ben Van Voorhees, and Ken Ward

2 Background  African Americans (AA’s) have a greater incidence of diabetes compared to Whites  AA’s suffer diabetes complications disproportionately relative to Whites:  CV disease (heart attacks, stroke)  Diabetic retinopathy (blindness)  Diabetic nephropathy (kidney failure)  Peripheral vascular disease (amputations)  Lifestyle interventions delay diabetes onset

3 Limitations of the DPP Study  Suggested efficacy in AA’s based on exploratory post-hoc analyses  DPP lifestyle intervention was an intensive high-cost medical model delivered by professional staff  Design not specifically targeted for AA’s at high risk for diabetes  In current form, may not be feasible in many AA communities

4 Primary Study Question We hypothesize that a culturally- appropriate community implementation model (Project PROUD) will reduce the incidence of Type II Diabetes Mellitus (DM) relative to standard care

5 Secondary Study Question We hypothesize that Project PROUD is cost effective when savings in long term medical costs are included ($50,000/quality adjusted life year)

6 Recruitment  Community-based recruitment conducted  Six study centers  Detroit  New Orleans  Memphis  Oakland  Houston  Chicago

7 Study Population Inclusion criteria:  African American adults  Age > 25 years  Plasma glucose  2 hour glucose 140-199 mg/dl (7.8 – 11.1 mmol/L) and  Fasting glucose 95-125 mg/dl (5.3 – 7.0 mmol/L)  Body Mass Index (BMI) > 24 kg/m 2

8 Study Population Exclusion criteria:  Other member in household enrolled  Type I or II diabetes  Taking medications that alter glucose tolerance  Illness that could seriously reduce life expectancy

9 Sample Size Assumptions  Effect sizes  Based on our pilot data, we predict a 30% reduction in diabetes incidence in AA’s randomized in Project PROUD relative to standard care  Incidence of 12.1% in standard care group

10 Screening and Recruitment Step 1 screening Step 2 OGTT Step 3 start run-in Step 5 randomization Number of participants 160,000 30,000 4,800 4,00 0 3,260* Step 4 end run-in

11 Randomization  Stratified randomization by study center  Sample size 1630 in each arm of the study = 3260  Project PROUD (community implementation of DPP)  Control (standard care)

12 Design and Protocol Project PROUD (n=1630) Standard Care (n=1630) Baseline Year 1 Year 3 Year 5 Year 4 Year 2 Year 6

13 Outcome Measures  Primary Outcome  Diabetes diagnosis (assessed annually)  Secondary Outcome  Physical Activity Level  Usual caloric intake  Body Mass Index (BMI)  HbA1c  All measures will be administered on the same schedules to both groups

14 Key Aspects of Project PROUD  Weight loss and physical activity goals  Lifestyle coaches  Intensive, ongoing intervention  Core curriculum  Supervised exercise sessions  Maintenance program

15 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American INTERVENTION COMPONENTS

16 Community Members as Peer Health Educators Project PROUD Community

17 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American Setting Health Clinic Churches

18 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American Setting Health Clinic Churches Diet Non-ethnic specific foods Soul food pyramid, cooking demonstrations

19 Project PROUD Community  Nutrition Education  Introduction to the Lifestyle Balance Program  Record Keeping of Food and Exercise Diary  Getting Started Losing Weight  Healthy Eating  Tip the Calorie Balance  Four Keys to Healthy Eating Out  You Can Manage Stress  Ways to Stay Motivated  Diet and Physical Activity Self Monitoring

20 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American Setting Health Clinic Churches Diet Non-ethnic specific foods Soul food pyramid, cooking demonstrations Exercise Brisk Walking Dancing Dancing Gospel Aerobics

21 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American Setting Health Clinic Churches Diet Non-ethnic specific foods Soul food pyramid, cooking demonstrations Exercise Brisk Walking Dancing Gospel Aerobics Adherence Strategies Problem-solvingReinforcements Healthy neighborhood options, ethnic-specific recipes/cookbooks

22 ComponentDPPPROUD Intervention Case Managers University-Trained Health Interventionists Trained Community Health Educators – African American Setting Health Clinic Churches Diet Non-ethnic specific foods Soul food pyramid, cooking demonstrations Exercise Brisk Walking Brisk walking Dancing Gospel Aerobics Adherence Strategies Problem-solvingReinforcements Healthy neighborhood options, ethnic-specific recipes/cookbooks Ethnically targeted materials Materials not targeted for African-Americans African-American specific materials (e.g., testimonials, illustrations, stories)

23 Time point StrategyPROUD Standard Care Week 1-24 16-week intensive lifestyle curriculum - Lifestyle workbook Self-monitoring 6 months + (maintenance) Monthly face-to-face consultations - Monthly phone contact - Group courses - Self-monitoring Annual reminders Intervention Schedule

24 Treatment Fidelity  Treatment Delivery  1-week initial training for lifestyle counselors  Weekly rounds to discuss cases  Review 3 audiotapes of sessions  Treatment Receipt  Follow-up adherence checklist covering goals of session (coach and participant)  Treatment Enactment  Weight assessment each meeting  Assessment of activity level and caloric intake

25 Ascertainment of Response Variables  Training of Assessors  Major assessments (6 mo and 1 year) conducted by independent study staff at local clinics  Assessors blinded to condition  Trained to assess behavior and biological variables

26 Adverse Events  Based on the DPP we will monitor for adverse events in both study arms  Musculoskeletal symptoms  Hospitalizations  Length of stay and diagnosis  Deaths  Cause of death

27

28 Data Analysis  Interim Monitoring  After 2 years of the study and every year following until end of study  Primary Analysis  Comparison of Diabetes Incidence between Project PROUD and Standard Care conditions  Time to outcome assessed using life-table methods  Secondary Analysis  Pair-wise comparisons of secondary outcomes

29 Secondary Outcome: Cost Effectiveness  Purpose: to determine if Project PROUD is cost effective when savings in long term medical costs are included ($50,000/quality adjusted life year)  Decision analysis model projecting results of Project PROUD into the general population  We will examine the cost effectiveness of this project under different assumptions

30 Model Assumptions  Efficacy: Study results relative to standard care  Costs (Project PROUD & standard care): all costs not related to research implementation  Costs (Medical): medical costs of diabetes and or complications treatment  Costs (Non-Medical): We will include estimates of productivity gained for those not diagnosed with DM

31 Cost Effectiveness Analysis  Outcome: costs/quality adjusted life year gained by intervention compared to standard care  First analysis: based on efficacy and costs in intervention  Second analysis: sensitivity analysis based on reasonable range of values for efficacy and costs anticipated in actual implementation conditions.

32 Methodologic Issues  Unit of randomization  Procedures designed to limit cross-arm contamination  Selection of diabetes incidence as primary endpoint  Use of African American churches as intervention sites

33 Other designs considered: 2-arm Eligible participants Randomized DPP Project PROUD Pros – Replicate DPP in African Americans Cons– Small expected effect – sample size approaches infinity

34 Other designs considered: 3-arm Eligible participants Randomized Standard careDPPProject PROUD Pros – Replicate DPP in African Americans Cons– Resource intensive

35 Proposed Design: 2-arm Eligible participants Randomized Standard Care Project PROUD

36 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS  Group 1 would like to thank the following faculty for assisting us in designing project PROUD Community:  Dr. Ron Abeles  Dr. Jim Blumenthal  Dr. Lynda Powell  Dr. Michael Proschan


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