Do Exercise, Physical Activity, Dietetic, or Combined Interventions Improve Body Weight in New Kidney Transplant Recipients? A Narrative Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Protocol and Registration
2.2. Study Identification
2.3. Study Selection, Data Extraction, and Risk-of-Bias
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Search Results and Study Characteristics
3.2. Characteristics of Interventions
3.3. Risk-of-Bias
3.4. Body Weight and BMI
3.5. Meta-Analyses Body Weight and BMI
3.6. Secondary Outcomes
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of Main Findings
4.2. Implications for Clinical Practice
4.3. Implications for Future Research
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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PICO(s) | Inclusion | Exclusion | Reasons for Exclusion |
---|---|---|---|
Population | KTRs within the first 12 months of transplantation | >12 months post-transplant <18 years of age Mixed samples (e.g., dialysis and transplant patients) | WG occurs within first year Different populations (adults vs. paediatric) Difficult to isolate effects to just KTR in mixed sample unless information provided by authors |
Intervention | Complex interventions involving either exercise, activity, nutrition, diet, behaviour-change, or combined interventions designed to prevent WG occurring | Treatments including pharmacological intervention | Difficult to isolate effects of the other components of the treatment |
Comparator | Usual care or standard care or no intervention | No comparator available | Difficult to determine the treatment effect(s) |
Outcomes-Primary outcome | WG from baseline to short term (3 months) baseline to long term (6–12 months) | No reported BW or BMI at baseline or follow-up (3–12 months) | Unable to determine change in BW or BMI |
Study Types | RCTs, non-RCTs (quasi-experimental) | Exclude literature reviews Exclude trials with no control group | Outside scope of this review |
Language | English | Limited resources for this project | |
Year | Published after 1985 | Changes to standards of care |
First Author, Year (Country of Origin) | Study Duration (Months) | Sample | Groups | Outcomes (Primary and Secondary) | Results (for Primary and Secondary Outcomes) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lawrence et al. [45] (UK) | 12 | n = 38, KTRs with hyperlipidaemia | IG: Dietitian only for 12 months CG: Usual care, no dietary intervention | Primary: Dietary intake (24-h recall assessed for total energy intake, fibre intake, protein, carbohydrate, fat and distribution of fat intake) and fasting lipids Secondary: BW, BMI, medications, Renal function | Primary: No significant difference between groups in total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, or plasma triglyceride levels LDL cholesterol was significantly lower in the IG at 1 month after Tx Significant improvement in polyunsaturated-to-unsaturated fat ratio in the IG Change in dietary intake not associated with changes in serum lipid levels Fibre intake significantly higher at 3 months in the IG Secondary: No difference in BMI, medication, or kidney function between groups at any time Both groups reduced average consumption of cigarettes and alcohol | AEs not reported Limited reporting of blinding, allocation, analysis plan, treatment, protocol deviations, and statistical plan |
Painter et al. [36] (USA) | 12 | n = 167 | IG: 12-months ET, home based AT CG: no ET | Primary: Not stated Secondary: VO2 peak, Muscle strength, BC (DEXA), QoL (SF-36), PA reporting (active or inactive) | Primary/Secondary: No difference in BW, BMI, or BC, all participants increased BW, BMI, FM, LTM, % FM IG had greater gains in VO2 peak and muscle strength IG had higher % classified as active at follow-up No difference in QoL | AEs not reported High dropout rate 42% did not complete assessment at all three timepoints Painter 2003 duplicate paper from this study |
Tzvetanov et al. [49] (USA) | 12 | n = 17, Obese KTRs | IG: 12-month combined Rx (lifestyle, exercise, behaviour, and nutrition guidance) CG: Nutritional guidance only | Primary: Not stated? feasibility Secondary: Physical (weightlifting capacity) and vascular function (PWV and CiMT), BC, QoL (SF-36), kidney function, blood lipid markers, and adherence | Primary/Secondary: No significant difference in BMI at 12 months Greater adherence to follow-up in IG (100%) vs. CG (25%) Improved weightlifting and PWV (IG only) significant difference in CiMT (IG only) Improvement in QoL (p = 0.008) and employment rate (p = 0.02) in IG vs. CG No significant differences between groups in kidney function or lipids | AEs not reported Small sample t-tests used, not ITT High dropouts in CG vs. IG Missing data (BC, PWV, CiMT) in CG |
Karelis et al. [46] (Canada) | ≈4 | n = 24, non-diabetic KTRs, excluded smoking history | IG: Exercise only for 16 weeks (RT)CG: Instructed not to perform any structured exercise | Primary: Feasibility outcomes (adherence, injuries, drop-outs) Secondary: BC (DEXA), OGTT, Lipid profile, BP, QoL, Anthropometrics, Muscle strength (leg press), VO2 peak | Primary: 47% consent rate 80% compliance IG 17% dropout IG Secondary: No difference in BW or BMI, BC, VO2 peak, lipids, OGTT or QoL Both groups increased FM (BC) IG associated with increase in muscle strength (p = 0.003) | No AEs or injuries reported Short study duration (16 weeks) Small sample size |
O’Connor et al. [39] (UK) | 12 | n = 47 of the original 60 ExeRT cohort [38] | IG1: Supervised AT for 12 weeks IG2:Supervised RT for 12 weeks CG: No ET for 12 weeks | Primary: PWV and VO2 peak Secondary: Anthropometrics, BP | Primary: Significant difference in PWV in IG2 (RT) vs. CG (p = 0.03) Favourable difference in VO2 peak IG1 (AT) vs. CG (p = 0.02) Secondary: No difference between-groups in BW or BP BMI not reported No difference in BMI reported in original study manuscript [38] | No AEs Long-term follow-up data from the ExeRT cohort [38] Dropouts ANCOVA used |
Henggeler et al. [54] (NZ) | 12 | n = 37 KTRs with a BMI of > 18.5 and <40 kg/m2 | IG: 12-month combined Rx including standard care + dietitian appointments (12 sessions in total) and exercise sessions CG: Standard care (4 sessions in 12 months) with renal dietitian | Primary: BW at 6 months adjusted for baseline weight, obesity, and gender Secondary: Change in Anthropometrics and BC (DEXA), resting energy expenditure, physical function (grip, 25-feet gait speed, STS), PA (NZ PA questionnaire), serum biochem, QoL (SF-36) | Primary: No significant difference in BW or BC between groups at 6 months Secondary: No between-group difference in BC or energy expenditure Both groups increased total body fat and % body fat No significant difference in biochemistry Whole sample HbA1c and fasting glucose increased, cholesterol decreased Whole sample improved physical function, body protein, and QoL | No AEs CG greater than clinical practice in the UK May require formal ET/PA to elicit training response ANCOVA used |
Kuningas et al. 2019 [48] (UK) | 6 | n = 130 nondiabetic KTRs | IG: 6-month exercise and nutrition education +BCTs CG: Passive education (booklet) on healthy eating, exercise, and risks of PTDM | Primary: 6-month change in insulin sensitivity, secretion, and disposition index (OGTT) Secondary: PA (GPPAQ), Physical function (DASI), QoL (EQ-5D), Beck depression inventory, situational motivational score, safety issues, BW, BC (skinfolds and bioimpedance) | Primary: No between-group difference in 6-month glucose metabolism Secondary: Significant between-group difference in BW favouring IG vs. UC (p = 0.02) Significant between-group difference in FM IG vs. CG (p = 0.03) Clinically significant reduction in PTDM, halved in IG vs. CG No between-group difference in any questionnaires | No safety concerns Dropout out rate 20.8% Pre–post study design with no long-term follow up Excluded non-diabetic KTRs Single centre study No reporting of BMI at 6 months |
Schmid-Mohler et al. [43] (Switzerland) | 12 | n = 123 KTR and Kidney-pancreas Tx (120 KTR) | IG: Control + 8-month nurse-led intervention including dietary and PA counselling with motivational interviewing and action planning CG: A single nurse-led education session with booklet | Primary: Difference in BMI (baseline to 8 months) in patients with a BMI of ≥18.5 kg/m2 Secondary: change in BMI baseline to 12 months, Rx adherence, satisfaction with counselling, BC (bioimpedance), PA (IPAQ), patient assessment of chronic illness care PACIC) | Primary: No significant between-group difference in change in BMI or BC from baseline to 8 months, or Baseline to 12 months Secondary: No significant differences between-group in BC, steps or IPAQ IG more chronic care related activities (PACIC) High acceptability IG 88.5% IG received ≥7 sessions Significant difference in PACIC in all but one score IG vs. CG No difference between groups in satisfaction with counselling | AEs not reported Sample includes kidney-pancreas Tx Means and SD for KTR (n = 120) provided on request. There was no significant between-group in BW or BMI at any timepoint in KTRs |
Serper et al. [44] (USA) | 4 | n = 127 KTR and Liver Transplants (65 KTR). Participants needed to own a smartphone compatible with wearable accelerometer | IG1: Device only group, access to online portal with education materials and questions + control education IG2: Control education + Intervention 1 + 2 plus bi-weekly texts, step goals and financial incentives CG: standard education on healthy diet, food hygiene and PA | Primary: Change in BW from baseline to 4 months Secondary: Daily steps—proportion of patients achieving > 7000 steps/day, and continuous daily step data | Primary: No significant difference in weight gain between all three groups (IG1, IG2 and CG) Secondary: Significantly higher step count reported in IG2 vs. IG1 (p < 0.001) Retention rate 92.1% Adherence final study weight assessment 88% 74% IG2 adhered to their step targets Study increased motivation to monitor weight and increase PA Some participants disappointed with randomisation Some IG patients requested ability to track different activities, and have non-step related goals | No AEs associated with study Combined sample (KTR and Liver Transplant) Unique approach with financial incentives Diet education not designed for weight management No longer-term follow-up BMI not reported |
Gibson et al. [53] (USA) | 6 | n = 10 KTR, 6–12 months post-transplant, Mean age 44 years, BMI >22 kg/m2, | IG: 6-month combined Rx via telehealth (dietitian-led, 12 weeks of one-hour weekly calls and PA classes). Followed by 12 weeks of maintenance. Provided with tablet to track food and veg intake, whole grains intake, water intake, steps, and PA weekly CG: Standardised education to follow healthy eating and PA. Provided with tablet and tracking (as above). Did not receive weekly video calls or PA classes | Primary: Primary outcomes relate to feasibility (recruitment, adherence, attendance) Secondary: Provide estimates of Rx effectiveness including changes to PA, food intake (fruit, veg, whole-grain, and water). Secondary outcomes included weight gain (baseline to six months), BW, BMI, BP, PA (accelerometer), QoL, Dietary intake (3-day food diary), qualitative interviews for strengths and weakness of intervention | Primary: 78% attendance telehealth sessions (IG) 86% adherence to weekly behaviour tracking via tablet All patients attended week 12 study assessments Tracking increased awareness but some had problems All would recommend trial to others Tailored education and the ability to complete Rx at home was valued Secondary: Weight gain and BMI greater in IG versus CHG QoL improvements greater in CG versus IG No difference in BP and PA between groups Improved diet quality in both groups | Specific recruitment criteria included the ability to take part in six-month trial, ability to report data weekly (by phone, fax, email), access to the internet, English speaking, willingness to be randomised One participant withdrew due to time commitments |
Study | Rx type | Rx Description | Rx Behaviour Components | Provider | Duration (Months) | Frequency | Intensity | Type of ET | Time (Minutes) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lawrence et al. [45] | Diet | Written and verbal edu to reduce hyperlipidaemia Diet: 30% total energy from fat and 50% from carbohydrates Mode: NI, assume F2F | NI | RD | 12 s | NI | NA | NA | NA |
Painter et al. [36] | Exercise | Home ET (independent) Fortnightly phone calls Mode: Telephone | Self-monitoring behaviour (diaries) Phone calls for encouragement | NI | 12 | 4x week | 60–65% HRM, ⬆ 75–80% HRM | AT | ≥30 |
Tzvetanov et al. [49] | Combined | Combination of 1:1 ET + CBT + nutrition Topics include reduce sodium, emotional eating, increase protein, reduce cholesterol, and balanced meals Aims of Rx; build muscle tissue, change thoughts, and empowerment Mode: F2F | CBT details not provided | P.Tr | 12 | ET 2x week | Not specified | RT | 60 |
Karelis et al. [46] | Exercise | ET programme of 7 exercises Upper and lower limb RT Mode: F2F supervised | NI | Kinesiology student | 16 weeks (≈3.68 months) | 3x week (1x week supervised) | 80% 1RM | RT | 45–60 |
O’Connor et al. [39] | Exercise | 2 intervention groups; AT and RT compared with UC Mode: F2F | Motivational interviewing | PT | 3 | 3x week (2x supervised group, 1x not supervised) | AT: 80% HRR RT: 80% 1RM 1–2 sets 10 reps, ⬆ to 3 sets | AT or RT vs. UC | 60 AT or RT 30 min/week edu (AT and RT) |
Henggeler et al. [54] | Combined | Multi-professional and components 12 sessions (4x UC sessions, plus 8 additional nutrition sessions) with RD Exercise and PA component Mode: NI, assume F2F | SMART goal setting and revision of goals Motivational interviewing Action planning Self-monitoring | RD Ex.Phys: ET and PA | 12 | 12x RD follow-ups 3x ET with Ex.Phys | ‘Tailored PA advice’, No further detail | NI | NI PA |
Kuningas et al. [48] | Combined | Combined lifestyle Rx to prevent PTDM, Dietary habits, Personalised healthy eating, edu based on Diabetes UK and Public Health England, Graded ET, Exercise diary, Mode: F2F and phone follow-up | BCTs used: Information on consequences, feedback on personal information prompting intention formation, SMART goals, graded tasks, self-monitoring, revision of goals, social support | RD | 6 | 4x F2F 1:1 with RD RD phone consultant between each F2F session | Specifics not Reported | AT | NI |
Schmid-Mohler et al. [43] | Combined | Developed brochure edu food types and hygiene, and encouraging PA Initial 1:1 edu session with brochure as per UC group +8 APN-led sessions Mode: F2F or phone | BCTs used: goal setting, problem solving, action planning, review behaviour and outcome goals, feedback on behaviour, self-monitoring of behaviour, instruction on how to perform behaviour, information about health consequences, prompts/cues, habit formation and reversal, focus on past success, self-monitoring of behaviour social support | APN (trained in motivational interviewing) | 8 | Combination of F2F and phone follow-up 9 sessions in total. | Specifics PA not reported | NI | 35 |
Serper et al. [44] | Combined + online | IG1: Device only: Step-counting device, Website with resources on healthy eating and PA, Health knowledge questionnaires Mode: online IG2. Device and Rx: As above + Financial incentives, + Automated step goals, + Bi-weekly text messages, for health questionnaire Mode: online and text | prompts/cues (text), financial incentives (rewards) | 1. Website 2. website and text messages (automated) by research team | 14 weeks (≈3.22 months) | 1. Online website, step-recording device 2. online website, step-recording device and text support | 1. Device only—no prescription 2. Device and Rx: baseline steps increased 15% every 2 weeks until reached 7000 steps/day | AT- steps | NI |
Gibson et al. [53] | Combined +tracking +video calls | both groups given tablets for weekly tracking (fruit/veg, wholegrains, water, steps, and PA) IG: 6-months video calls: Tracking, 12 weeks of diet Edu (DASH diet), 12 weeks group PA, 12 weeks maintenance using tracking only Mode: video calls | Rx informed by the Social Cognitive Theory [57] and self-efficacy [58] Self-monitoring Goal setting | Tracking (not supervised) on tablet Diet Edu (RD), group PA (exercise professional) | 6 | Weekly | Moderate intensity (3–6 metabolic equivalent of task) | NI | Diet 1:1 and group PA 30 min/week (total 60 min/week) Encouraged to do 10–15 min PA/day |
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Castle, E.M.; McBride, E.; Greenwood, J.; Bramham, K.; Chilcot, J.; Greenwood, S.A. Do Exercise, Physical Activity, Dietetic, or Combined Interventions Improve Body Weight in New Kidney Transplant Recipients? A Narrative Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Kidney Dial. 2021, 1, 100-120. https://doi.org/10.3390/kidneydial1020014
Castle EM, McBride E, Greenwood J, Bramham K, Chilcot J, Greenwood SA. Do Exercise, Physical Activity, Dietetic, or Combined Interventions Improve Body Weight in New Kidney Transplant Recipients? A Narrative Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Kidney and Dialysis. 2021; 1(2):100-120. https://doi.org/10.3390/kidneydial1020014
Chicago/Turabian StyleCastle, Ellen M., Emily McBride, James Greenwood, Kate Bramham, Joseph Chilcot, and Sharlene A. Greenwood. 2021. "Do Exercise, Physical Activity, Dietetic, or Combined Interventions Improve Body Weight in New Kidney Transplant Recipients? A Narrative Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Kidney and Dialysis 1, no. 2: 100-120. https://doi.org/10.3390/kidneydial1020014
APA StyleCastle, E. M., McBride, E., Greenwood, J., Bramham, K., Chilcot, J., & Greenwood, S. A. (2021). Do Exercise, Physical Activity, Dietetic, or Combined Interventions Improve Body Weight in New Kidney Transplant Recipients? A Narrative Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Kidney and Dialysis, 1(2), 100-120. https://doi.org/10.3390/kidneydial1020014