Abstract
Adolescents and young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) have high rates of obesity and low levels of physical activity. This analysis examined changes in light, moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and sedentary time, and the association between changes in MVPA and weight loss in adolescents and young adults with IDD and overweight and obesity participating in a 6-month multi-component weight loss intervention. Adolescents and young adults with IDD and overweight or obesity (body mass index≥85 percentile, n=110, age ~16years, 52.7% female) and a parent were randomised to one of three intervention groups: face-to-face delivery/conventional reduced energy diet (n=36), remote delivery (RD)/conventional reduced energy diet (n=39), or RD/reduced energy enhanced stop light diet (eSLD) (n=35.) Participants were asked to engage in 60min/day of MVPA on 5 or more days/wk. Participants and a parent attended twice monthly education/behavioural counselling sessions with a health educator to assist participants in complying with dietary and MVPA recommendations. Education/counselling in the RD arms was delivered remotely using video conferencing, and self-monitoring of MVPA and daily steps was completed using a wireless activity tracker. Education/counselling in the face-to-face arm was delivered during home-visits and self-monitoring of MVPA and daily steps was completed by self-report using paper tracking forms designed for individuals with IDD. MVPA, light activity, and sedentary time were assessed over 7days at baseline and 6months using a portable accelerometer (ActiGraph wGT3x-BT). Mixed modelling analysis completed using participants with valid accelerometer data (i.e. ≥4-10h days) at baseline (n=68) and 6months (n=30) revealed no significant changes in light, moderate- MVPA, or sedentary time across the 6-month intervention (all P>0.05). Participants obtained 15.2±21.5min/day of MVPA at baseline and 19.7±19.7min/day at 6months (P=0.119). Mixed modelling indicated no significant effects of group (P=0.79), time (P=0.10), or group-by-time interaction (P=0.21) on changes in MVPA from baseline to 6months. Correlational analysis conducted on participants with valid accelerometer data at both baseline and 6months (n=24) revealed no significant associations between baseline sedentary time (r=0.10, P=0.40) and baseline MVPA (r=-0.22, P=0.30) and change in MVPA across the 6-month intervention. Additionally, attendance at education/counselling sessions (r=0.26, P=0.22) and frequency of self-monitoring of MVPA were not significantly associated with change in MVPA from baseline to 6months (r=0.26, P=0.44). Baseline MVPA (r=0.02, P=0.92) and change in MVPA from baseline to 6months (r=0.13, P=0.30) were not associated with changes in body weight across the 6-month intervention. We observed a non-significant increase in MVPA (30%), which was not associated with the magnitude of weight loss in a sample of adolescents and young adults with IDD who participated in a 6-month multi-component weight loss intervention. Additional strategies to increase MVPA in adolescents and young adults with IDD participating in weight loss interventions need to be developed and evaluated.
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