Background and Aims: NASH is a common disease associated with increased rates of thromboembolism (TE). Although exercise training can lessen thrombotic risk in patients with vascular disease, whether similar findings are observed in patients with NASH is open for study. Approach and Results: We conducted a 20-week randomized controlled clinical trial involving patients with biopsy-confirmed NASH. Patients were randomly assigned (2:1 ratio) to receive either an exercise training program or standard clinical care. The primary endpoint was change in plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1) level, an established thrombotic biomarker. Twentyeight patients were randomly assigned (18 exercise training and 10 standard clinical care). PAI-1 level was significantly decreased by exercise training when compared to standard clinical care (−40 ± 100 vs. +70 ± 63 ng/ml;
Background & Aims:
Lifestyle intervention remains the foundation of clinical care for patients with NASH; however, most patients are unsuccessful in enacting sustained behavioral change. There remains a clear unmet need to develop lifestyle intervention programs to support weight loss. Mobile health (mHealth) programs offer promise to address this need, yet their efficacy remains unexplored.
Approach & Results:
We conducted a 16-week randomized controlled clinical trial involving adults with NASH. Patients were randomly assigned (1:1 ratio) to receive Noom Weight (NW), a mHealth lifestyle intervention program, or standard clinical care. The primary end point was a change in body weight. Secondary end points included feasibility (weekly app engagement), acceptability (>50% approached enrolled), and safety. Of 51 patients approached, 40 (78%) were randomly assigned (20 NW and 20 standard clinical care). NW significantly decreased body weight when compared to standard clinical care (-5.5 kg vs. -0.3 kg,
p
= 0.008; -5.4% vs. -0.4%,
p
= 0.004). More NW subjects achieved a clinically significant weight loss of ≥5% body weight (45% vs. 15%,
p
= 0.038). No adverse events occurred, and the majority (70%) of subjects in the NW arm met the feasibility criteria.
Conclusions:
This clinical trial demonstrated that NW is not only feasible, acceptable, and safe but also highly efficacious because this mHealth lifestyle intervention program led to significantly greater body weight loss than standard clinical care. Future large-scale studies are required to validate these findings with more representative samples and to determine if mHealth lifestyle intervention programs can lead to sustained, long-term weight loss in patients with NASH.
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