Faina Tsodikov1, Meir Schechter2,3, Rebecca Goldsmith4, Lilach Peleg4, Vered Baloush-Kleinman5, Aliza Rozenberg2,3, Ilan Yanuv2,3, Yuri Gimelfarb6, Ofri Mosenzon2, Ronit Endevelt4,7. 1. Nutrition Division, Ministry of Health, Jerusalem, Israel. faina.tsodikov@gmail.com. 2. Diabetes Unit, Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Hadassah Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel. 3. Faculty of Medicine, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel. 4. Nutrition Division, Ministry of Health, Jerusalem, Israel. 5. Mental Health Rehabilitation System, Division of Medicine, Ministry of Health, Jerusalem, Israel. 6. Abarbanel Mental Health Center, Bat Yam, affiliated to the Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel. 7. School of Public Health, University of Haifa, Haifa, Israel.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Cardiometabolic disorders contribute to morbidity and mortality in people with severe mental illnesses (SMI), yet lifestyle-intervention efficacy in patients with SMI is unclear. Israel's unique mental-health rehabilitation hostels (MHRHs) provide housing to subjects with SMI. We tested how multi-component lifestyle intervention affects cardiometabolic risk-factors in at-risk SMI populations residing in MHRHs. METHODS: In a prospective, cluster-randomized, controlled study, six MHRHs, paired by residents' functioning level, were randomized to lifestyle intervention (nutrition education, physical education), or usual care. Subjects recruited included those with ≥1 of: BMI > 25 kg/m2; plasma triglycerides ≥150 mg/dL; HbA1c ≥ 5.7%; fasting plasma glucose ≥ 100 mg/dL and plasma HDL < 40(men)/ 50(women) mg/dL. Primary outcome was BMI change after 15 months; other outcomes were plasma lipids levels and glycemic control. Low cooperation in one MHRH pair led to their exclusion, the others were assigned to intervention or control. RESULTS: Eighty residents were enrolled to intervention groups and 74 to control. Compared to baseline, intervention-arm participants experienced improvements in BMI (-0.83 kg/m2 [-1.36, -0.29] 95%CI), triglycerides (-30.60 mg/dL [-49.39, -11.82]95%CI) and LDL (-15.51 mg/dL [-24.53, -6.50]95%CI) (all P ≤ 0.003). BMI improvement correlated with number of dietitian consultations (r = -0.30; P = 0.001). No significant differences were found between treatment arms in BMI (-0.46 kg/m2 [-1.11, 0.18]95%CI;P = 0.189), triglycerides (-24.70 mg/dL [-57.66, 8.25]95%CI), LDL (-9.24 mg/dL [-20.50, 2.03]95%CI), HDL and glycemic control. CONCLUSIONS: Lifestyle intervention significantly improved BMI, LDL and triglycerides compared to baseline in at-risk MHRHs residents with SMI, yet compared to usual care the differences did not reach statistical significance. The association between the number of dietitian's consultations and BMI improvement suggests that programs should highlight participants' adherence.
OBJECTIVE: Cardiometabolic disorders contribute to morbidity and mortality in people with severe mental illnesses (SMI), yet lifestyle-intervention efficacy in patients with SMI is unclear. Israel's unique mental-health rehabilitation hostels (MHRHs) provide housing to subjects with SMI. We tested how multi-component lifestyle intervention affects cardiometabolic risk-factors in at-risk SMI populations residing in MHRHs. METHODS: In a prospective, cluster-randomized, controlled study, six MHRHs, paired by residents' functioning level, were randomized to lifestyle intervention (nutrition education, physical education), or usual care. Subjects recruited included those with ≥1 of: BMI > 25 kg/m2; plasma triglycerides ≥150 mg/dL; HbA1c ≥ 5.7%; fasting plasma glucose ≥ 100 mg/dL and plasma HDL < 40(men)/ 50(women) mg/dL. Primary outcome was BMI change after 15 months; other outcomes were plasma lipids levels and glycemic control. Low cooperation in one MHRH pair led to their exclusion, the others were assigned to intervention or control. RESULTS: Eighty residents were enrolled to intervention groups and 74 to control. Compared to baseline, intervention-arm participants experienced improvements in BMI (-0.83 kg/m2 [-1.36, -0.29] 95%CI), triglycerides (-30.60 mg/dL [-49.39, -11.82]95%CI) and LDL (-15.51 mg/dL [-24.53, -6.50]95%CI) (all P ≤ 0.003). BMI improvement correlated with number of dietitian consultations (r = -0.30; P = 0.001). No significant differences were found between treatment arms in BMI (-0.46 kg/m2 [-1.11, 0.18]95%CI;P = 0.189), triglycerides (-24.70 mg/dL [-57.66, 8.25]95%CI), LDL (-9.24 mg/dL [-20.50, 2.03]95%CI), HDL and glycemic control. CONCLUSIONS: Lifestyle intervention significantly improved BMI, LDL and triglycerides compared to baseline in at-risk MHRHs residents with SMI, yet compared to usual care the differences did not reach statistical significance. The association between the number of dietitian's consultations and BMI improvement suggests that programs should highlight participants' adherence.
Authors: Donna K Arnett; Roger S Blumenthal; Michelle A Albert; Andrew B Buroker; Zachary D Goldberger; Ellen J Hahn; Cheryl Dennison Himmelfarb; Amit Khera; Donald Lloyd-Jones; J William McEvoy; Erin D Michos; Michael D Miedema; Daniel Muñoz; Sidney C Smith; Salim S Virani; Kim A Williams; Joseph Yeboah; Boback Ziaeian Journal: Circulation Date: 2019-03-17 Impact factor: 29.690