Abstract

BackgroundCurrent recommendations for intensive behavioral interventions for childhood obesity treatment do not account for variable participant attendance, optimal duration of the intervention, mode of delivery (phone vs. face-to-face), or address obesity prevention among young children. A secondary analysis of an active one-year behavioral intervention for childhood obesity prevention was conducted to test how “dose delivered” was associated with body mass index z-score (BMI-Z) across 3 years of follow-up.MethodsParent-child pairs were eligible if they qualified for government assistance and spoke English or Spanish. Children were between three and 5 years old and were at risk for but not yet obese (BMI percentiles ≥50th and < 95th). The intended intervention dose was 18 h over 3-months via 12 face-to-face “intensive sessions” (90 min each) and 6.75 h over the next 9 months via 9 “maintenance phone calls” (45 min each). Ordinary least-squares multivariable regression was utilized to test for associations between dose delivered and child BMI-Z immediately after the 1-year intervention, and at 2-, and 3-year follow-up, including participants who were initially randomized to the control group as having “zero” dose.ResultsAmong 610 parent-child pairs (intervention n = 304, control n = 306), mean child age was 4.3 (SD = 0.9) years and 51.8% were female. Mean dose delivered was 10.9 (SD = 2.5) of 12 intensive sessions and 7.7 (SD = 2.4) of 9 maintenance calls. Multivariable linear regression models indicated statistically significant associations of intensive face-to-face contacts (B = -0.011; 95% CI [− 0.021, − 0.001]; p = 0.029) and maintenance calls (B = -0.015; 95% CI [− 0.026, − 0.004]; p = 0.006) with lower BMI-Z immediately following the 1-year intervention. Their interaction was also significant (p = 0.04), such that parent-child pairs who received higher numbers of both face-to-face intensive sessions (> 6) and maintenance calls (> 8) were predicted to have lower BMI-Z. Sustained impacts were not statistically significant at 2- or 3-year follow-up.ConclusionsIn a behavioral intervention for childhood obesity prevention, the combination of a modest dose of face-to-face sessions (> 6 h over 3 months) with sustained maintenance calls (> 8 calls over 9 months) was associated with improved BMI-Z at 1-year for underserved preschool aged children, but sustained impacts were not statistically significant at 2 or 3 year follow-up.Clinical trial registrationThe trial was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01316653) on March 16, 2011, which was prior to participant enrollment.

Highlights

  • Current recommendations for intensive behavioral interventions for childhood obesity treatment do not account for variable participant attendance, optimal duration of the intervention, mode of delivery, or address obesity prevention among young children

  • Clinical trial registration: The trial was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01316653) on March 16, 2011, which was prior to participant enrollment

  • In a post-hoc analysis of the Growing Right Onto Wellness Trial (GROW), we evaluated the relationship between dose delivered and child body mass index Z-score (BMI-Z) at multiple follow-up timepoints

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Summary

Introduction

The authors of the USPSTF recommendations highlight that it is unclear whether the 26-h recommendation will be relevant in settings with inconsistent participant adherence, in interventions for young children, or in an obesity prevention context. The implications of these uncertainties were highlighted by a recent systematic review and metaregression that found that the dose of a behavioral intervention was unrelated to effect size on child weight outcomes [9]. There is limited evidence to quantify the appropriate dose or duration required to support obesity prevention for underserved populations at higher risk for the emergence of childhood obesity

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