The Role of Circadian Rhythm in the Effect of Sleep Intervention on Obesity Prevention in Early Childhood

NCT ID: NCT05159141

Last Updated: 2021-12-15

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

UNKNOWN

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

480 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-01-01

Study Completion Date

2024-12-30

Brief Summary

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Over the last 40 years, obesity has increased dramatically among all age groups, especially in infants and young children, and became an important global public health challenge, thus early prevention is the highest priority. Emerging studies have found that infant sleep intervention is very likely to become one of the most important strategies for early obesity prevention. However, its action path is not clear, making the target of sleep intervention relatively vague. The role of circadian rhythm in human health status has received increasing attention in recent years. Both animal experiment-based studies and adult clinic-based studies have found significant effect of the circadian rhythm on obesity and other metabolic disorders. Therefore, the present research will establish a community-based 1:1 parallel multi-center randomized controlled trial of sleep intervention cohort in communities with highly rapid weight gain at the early infancy stage. Investigators will collect daily rhythm data, including sleep-wake rhythm, rest-activity rhythm, light-dark cycle, and feeding-fasting, as well as the real-world golden standard of circadian rhythm assessed by seven times saliva melatonin, to test the impact of the sleep intervention program, to determine the causal mechanism of circadian rhythm in the occurrence\ and\  development of obesity and metabolic disorder early in life. Our study will provide a new theoretical basis for the establishment of the stable circadian rhythm for the prevention of infant obesity, which has important public health significance.

Detailed Description

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1. Research content 1.1 Study on the Reliability and Validity of Daily Circadian Rhythm of Infant and Young Child Behavior and Establishment of Circadian Circadian Rhythm Prediction Model In three study communities, 10 infants aged 4 months, 6 months, 12 months and 2 years old were recruited, with a total of 120 infants. Daily rhythms of sleep, activity, illumination and eating were collected by using portable device Actiwatch-2 and daily log book. Saliva at 7 time points (09: 00, 13: 00, 17: 00, 21: 00, 01: 00, 05: 00 and 09: 00) were collected to determine the level of melatonin as the gold standard for circadian rhythm of biological clocks under natural environment. The correlation between daily circadian rhythms and characteristics of melatonin secretion was determined. A model with high reliability was established by mathematical modeling.

1.2 Multicenter Cohort Study of Effects of Sleep Intervention on Metabolic Function in Childhood Obesity Methods: A 1: 1 parallel multicenter randomized controlled trial was conducted to recruit 80 infants from each of the control group and the intervention group at 28 days after birth. The control group was followed up for 5 times (28 days, 2 months, 4 months, 6 months and 12 months) of evidence-based infant sleep intervention on the basis of routine child care, and followed up until 2 years old. The main outcomes were changes in BMI z at 0-6 months of age and metabolic markers of obesity at 2 years of age, such as BMI z, subcutaneous fat, body composition and blood biochemistry. On the basis of descriptive analysis, the effects of sleep intervention on infant obesity metabolism and daily rhythm were determined, and the causal mechanism of circadian rhythm, obesity metabolic index and other factors were determined by using Bayesian causal network.

1.3 Verification of Predictive Models for Circadian Rhythms of Behavioral Clocks In the second part of the three study communities, the two groups were randomly selected 20 cases, a total of 120 infants and children.

At 4 months, 6 months, 12 months and 2 years of age after birth, saliva samples were collected at 2 time points in addition to Actiwatch-2 and daily rhythm data, and melatonin levels were measured to validate the rhythm prediction model.
2. Research objectives

Based on the concept of early prevention, this project focuses on the role of circadian rhythms in infant sleep intervention to prevent obesity and accomplishes the following two objectives:

2.1 To determine the intensity of correlation between the daily rhythm of infants and the characteristics of melatonin secretion rhythm of gold standard.

Over mathematical modeling to establish high reliability and validity of behavioral biological clock circadian rhythm prediction model in infants and young children to verify and apply to sleep intervention multicenter cohort study.

2.2 To explore the effect of sleep intervention on infants by establishing a standard multicenter cohort of infant sleep intervention It is of great public health significance to provide high quality evidence for early prevention and control of childhood obesity and to design more pertinent prevention and control strategies.

Conditions

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Infant Sleep Problem

Keywords

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Sleep Obesity prevention Circadian rhythm Children Behavioral intervention

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Infants are randomly assigned to one of two groups: Behavioral Sleep Intervention or Control.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Outcome Assessors
Trial participants and individuals assessing the outcomes are blinded to the participant's condition

Study Groups

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control

Infant sleep monitoring (Actigraphy and sleep dairy) and parental surveys

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Infant behavioral sleep intervention

Interventionists collaborate with the family to design a tailored sleep intervention strategy, which involves appropriate sleep schedule and bedtime routine, putting the child to bed while still sleepy rather than when already asleep, and waiting 1 to 2 minutes before attending to the child during nocturnal awakenings. Parents are educated to implement the behavioral protocol at bedtime and subsequent night wakings.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Behavioral sleep intervention

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The intervention consists of an infant behavioral sleep protocol. In the tailored intervention approach, parents are asked to implement the behavioral protocol at bedtime and at subsequent night wakings.

Interventions

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Behavioral sleep intervention

The intervention consists of an infant behavioral sleep protocol. In the tailored intervention approach, parents are asked to implement the behavioral protocol at bedtime and at subsequent night wakings.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Infants and young children: age 4 months, 6 months, 12 months, and 2 years old;
* term single birth (37-42 weeks of gestation);
* health inactive disease;
* normal Griffiths developmental assessment;
* natural vaginal delivery or social cesarean section;
* Apgar score greater than 7 at birth for 1 or 5 minute.

Exclusion Criteria

* Infants and young children: birth weight \< 2500 g;
* premature or multiple births;
* prenatal ultrasonography indicating intrauterine growth retardation;
* severe organic diseases of the baby after birth that have been hospitalized for treatment;
* congenital malformations or diseases affecting the feeding of the baby (cleft lip and palate, metabolic diseases, etc.).
Minimum Eligible Age

2 Months

Maximum Eligible Age

2 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Sijia Gu

staff of Research Department

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Jiang Fan, PhD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Shanghai children's medicial center affiliated shanghai jiaotong University School of Medicine

Locations

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Shanghai children's medicial center affiliated shanghai jiaotong University School of Medicine

Shanghai, Shanghai Municipality, China

Site Status

Countries

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China

Central Contacts

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Jiang Fan, PhD

Role: CONTACT

Phone: 021-38626161

Email: [email protected]

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Other Identifiers

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SCMCIRB-Y2020006

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id