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Trial registered on ANZCTR
Registration number
ACTRN12615000400561
Ethics application status
Approved
Date submitted
10/04/2015
Date registered
29/04/2015
Date last updated
29/04/2015
Type of registration
Retrospectively registered
Titles & IDs
Public title
A four-armed randomised controlled demonstration trial of a multifaceted dietary intervention and probiotic capsules in obese pregnant women in the Counties Manukau Health region
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Scientific title
A randomised controlled trial of nutritional interventions in obese pregnant women to optimise maternal pregnancy weight gain and infant birthweight: a demonstration study
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Secondary ID [1]
286469
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None
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Universal Trial Number (UTN)
U1111-1155-0409
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Trial acronym
HUMBA (Healthy mUMs and BAbies) Trial
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Linked study record
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Health condition
Health condition(s) or problem(s) studied:
Pregnancy weight gain
294656
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Infant birthweight
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Obesity
294784
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Pregnancy
294785
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Glucose metabolism
294786
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Condition category
Condition code
Reproductive Health and Childbirth
294957
294957
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0
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Antenatal care
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Diet and Nutrition
295126
295126
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0
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Obesity
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Intervention/exposure
Study type
Interventional
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Description of intervention(s) / exposure
This is a randomised controlled demonstration trial in 220 obese pregnant women to determine whether treatment with a probiotic capsule and/or dietary educational intervention:
1) Reduce excessive pregnancy weight gain
2) Reduce infant birthweight
Participants will be randomly allocated to one of the four study groups:
1) Probiotic and dietary intervention (group 1)
2) Placebo and dietary intervention (group 2)
3) Probiotic and routine dietary advice (group 3)
4) Placebo and routine dietary advice (group 4, controls).
Randomisation of participants to probiotics/placebo is double-blinded and the dietary intervention is unblinded.
Probiotics: The oral probiotic capsules will contain Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG and Bifidobacterium lactis BB12 (Chr. Hansen A/S, Horsholm, Denmark) at a dose of 7*10x9 colony-forming units per day each. The probiotics capsules are taken once-daily from recruitment (between 12 weeks and zero days and 17 weeks and 6 days) until delivery. Compliance with probiotic/placebo will be assessed by counting and documenting capsule numbers remaining in canisters when repeat supplies are provided to participants at monthly intervals.
Dietary intervention: Dietary education will be provided by a community health worker (CHW) trained in pregnancy nutrition, over four counselling sessions before the 26-28 week oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT). This will be complemented by 3-times weekly text messaging about healthy nutrition which will continue until birth. In-depth education will be provided by the CHW to women in the dietary intervention groups on healthy eating including: portion control, healthy food and drink choices, limiting energy dense foods, healthy recipes, label reading and managing cravings. Education on physical activity will cover four key physical activity messages (from the Te Wai o Rona program) which are relevant to pregnant women: look for ways to be active every day; increase daily exercise; move more, add more steps; and reduce sedentary leisure time. Each participant will have an initial 1 to 1.5 hour educational session (on average at about 14 weeks’ gestation) with the CHW. Three further 30 to 60 minute face-to-face sessions will occur with the CHW at two to three weekly intervals and be completed before the 26-28 week OGTT. Compliance with the dietary intervention will be assessed by the number of educational sessions participants attend with the CHW.
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Intervention code [1]
291556
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Prevention
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Intervention code [2]
291557
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Lifestyle
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Comparator / control treatment
Control treatment for probiotics:
Identically-packaged placebo capsules comprise microcrystalline cellulose and dextrose anhydrate and are also supplied by Chr. Hansen A/S, Horsholm, Denmark. Placebo capsules are also taken once-daily.
Control for dietary intervention: Participants in the routine dietary advice groups will receive two NZ Ministry of Health pamphlets which are available in routine antenatal care: 1) "Guidance for Healthy Weight Gain in Pregnancy" and 2) "Eating for Healthy Pregnant Women" .
The "Guidance for Healthy Weight Gain in Pregnancy" contains information about recommended optimum healthy weight gain by maternal body mass index categories (according to 2009 Institute of Medicine Guidelines), risks of excess weight gain and some simple tips about nutrition and physical activity that may assist with optimising weight gain.
"Eating for Healthy Pregnant Women" is developed from the New Zealand "Food and Nutrition Guidelines for Healthy Pregnant and Breastfeeding Women".
This leaflet incorporates information on: food for a healthy mother and baby, dietary variety, drinking plenty of fluids, foods low in fat, salt and sugar, keeping active, food safety and listeria, salmonella, campylobacter and toxoplasma, snack and lunch ideas, eating well during pregnancy, indigestion, heartburn, constipation, alcohol, being smokefree, folic acid, iodine, and vitamin D.
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Control group
Placebo
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Outcomes
Primary outcome [1]
294713
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Proportion of participants with excessive pregnancy weight gain by 2009 Institute of Medicine Criteria measured on Seca 876 scales.
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Assessment method [1]
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Timepoint [1]
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Weight gain is measured between study recruitment and the research visit at 36 weeks of gestation.
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Primary outcome [2]
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Infant birthweight (in the delivery unit after birth) measured using Seca 334 scales to the nearest gram
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Assessment method [2]
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Timepoint [2]
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At birth
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Secondary outcome [1]
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Fasting, 1 hour and 2 hour maternal glucose levels
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Assessment method [1]
314002
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Timepoint [1]
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26-28 weeks gestation extended oral glucose tolerance test
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Secondary outcome [2]
314003
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Diet quality and healthy eating index as assessed by the NZ Food Frequency Questionnaire - Short Form
Ref: Sam et al. Public Health Nutrition 2014:17(2):287-96
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Assessment method [2]
314003
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Timepoint [2]
314003
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Between recruitment and research visit at 26-28 weeks' of gestation, and recruitment and follow up research visit at 4-6 months postpartum.
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Secondary outcome [3]
314004
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Gestational Diabetes by IADPSG criteria
Ref: Diabetes Care. 2010 Mar;33(3):676-82.
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Assessment method [3]
314004
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Timepoint [3]
314004
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All women will have an extended glucose tolerance test at 26-28 weeks' of gestation.
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Secondary outcome [4]
314005
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Pregnancy Induced Hypertension
Ref: Pregnancy Hypertension: An International Journal of Women's Cardiovascular Health. 2014;4(2):97-104.
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Assessment method [4]
314005
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Timepoint [4]
314005
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Pregnancy induced hypertension developing after 20 weeks gestation
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Secondary outcome [5]
314006
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Maternal weight measured on Seca 876 scales in kilograms and grams and infant weight measured using Seca 334 scales in kilograms and grams
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Assessment method [5]
314006
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Timepoint [5]
314006
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at follow up visit at 4-6 months postpartum
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Secondary outcome [6]
314007
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HBA1c measured using the Roche Cobas b101 point of care finger prick blood test.
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Assessment method [6]
314007
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Timepoint [6]
314007
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Research visits at 28, 36 weeks of gestation and 4-6 months postpartum
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Eligibility
Key inclusion criteria
1) Women with a BMI greater than or equal to 30 kg/m2,
2) singleton pregnancy
3) between 12 weeks 0 days and 17 weeks and 6 days of gestation
4) able to provide informed written consent
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Minimum age
No limit
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Maximum age
No limit
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Sex
Females
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Can healthy volunteers participate?
No
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Key exclusion criteria
1) pre-existing diabetes or HbA1c at booking >=50 mmol/mol
2) taking probiotic supplements
3) known congenital abnormality
4) medications or medical conditions which alter glucose metabolism
5) bariatric surgery
6) severe hyperemesis
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Study design
Purpose of the study
Prevention
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Allocation to intervention
Randomised controlled trial
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Procedure for enrolling a subject and allocating the treatment (allocation concealment procedures)
We will have a multi-pronged approach to optimise enrolment including through lead maternity caregivers (self-employed midwives), community antenatal clinics, general practitioners, practice nurses, ultrasound clinics and community contacts. Lead maternity caregivers will notify the research team about eligible women who are interested in participating and the research assistant will contact the woman and arrange a time to meet her to explain the study, confirm eligibility and obtain informed consent.
In order to exclude women with previously unrecognised Type 2 diabetes, HbA1c will be measured (using the Roche cobas b 101 point-of-care system) in all participants prior to randomisation. If HbA1c is greater or equal to 50, women will be considered to have undiagnosed diabetes, be deemed ineligible and referred to the Diabetes in Pregnancy Service at Counties Manukau Health.
Christian Hansen have provided identically packaged placebo and probiotic capsules in canisters (containing 31 capsules each). AnQual Laboratories (School of Pharmacy, University of Auckland) has labelled the canisters containing probiotic/placebo capsules using a pre-allocated random list. The kit list used to label the pills was generated by the Project Manager (the only HUMBA staff member unblinded to probiotic/placebo allocation) and AnQual. The Excel random function was used to generate a random sequence of numbers to label each probiotic/placebo alutube. This list has secure password protection and is currently stored with AnQual.
Randomisation will be undertaken using a web-based protocol, randomize.net (http://randomize.net). For randomisation purposes, each research midwife will serve as a proxy for ‘clinical site’ (this will enable each research midwife to be able to dispense the randomised study capsules at the end of the recruitment interview). Participants will be stratified by ‘clinical site’ (n=2) and BMI category (BMI of 30-34.9 or BMI >=35 kg/m2) and randomly allocated to one of the four study groups.
The canisters (half probiotics and half placebo) will be sent once-monthly to the study location. All clinical and research staff and participants will be masked to the randomised probiotic/placebo allocation.
Compliance with probiotics/placebo will be assessed by the research team via patient self-report and counting and documenting capsules remaining in canisters when repeat supplies are provided.
Although it will not be possible for clinical and research staff to be blinded to the dietary intervention allocation, the key health outcomes including pregnancy weight gain and infant birthweight are not subject to bias.
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Methods used to generate the sequence in which subjects will be randomised (sequence generation)
Randomisation will be undertaken using random block sizes generated by the study statistician.
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Masking / blinding
Blinded (masking used)
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Who is / are masked / blinded?
The people receiving the treatment/s
The people administering the treatment/s
The people assessing the outcomes
The people analysing the results/data
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Intervention assignment
Factorial
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Other design features
4 arm randomised controlled demonstration trial
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Phase
Not Applicable
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Type of endpoint/s
Efficacy
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Statistical methods / analysis
Sample size calculation and power:
A total of 220 participants will be recruited. With 80% power and 100 subjects remaining in each main intervention group (allowing 10% lost to follow-up) we can detect:
1) 25% reduction in excessive pregnancy weight gain from 80% to 60% (based on an 80% rate of excess weight gain in obese participants in the SCOPE study), and
2) 227 g difference in mean birthweight (based on Counties Manukau Health data; mean 3,638, SD 521).
To allow for the two primary outcomes an alpha of 0.025 is used for the power calculations (Bonferroni approach).
Statistical Analyses:
Binary endpoints will be analysed using logistic regression to estimate odds ratios of treatment groups compared to the control group.
Continuous outcomes will be modelled using generalised linear models to estimate any changes in outcomes with the treatment group compared to the control group.
Multivariable analyses will control for potential confounders including BMI and ethnicity. Outcomes compared across all groups will be adjusted for multiple comparisons.
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Recruitment
Recruitment status
Recruiting
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Date of first participant enrolment
Anticipated
20/04/2015
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Actual
22/04/2015
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Date of last participant enrolment
Anticipated
1/02/2016
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Actual
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Date of last data collection
Anticipated
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Actual
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Sample size
Target
220
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Accrual to date
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Final
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Recruitment outside Australia
Country [1]
6801
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New Zealand
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State/province [1]
6801
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Auckland
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Funding & Sponsors
Funding source category [1]
291073
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University
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Name [1]
291073
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University of Auckland
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Address [1]
291073
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Pvt Bag 92019, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142
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Country [1]
291073
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New Zealand
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Funding source category [2]
291074
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Charities/Societies/Foundations
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Name [2]
291074
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CureKids
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Address [2]
291074
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58 Surrey Cres
Grey Lynn
Auckland 1142
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Country [2]
291074
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New Zealand
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Funding source category [3]
291075
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Hospital
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Name [3]
291075
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Counties Manukau Health
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Address [3]
291075
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19 Lambie Drive
Manukau 2104
Auckland
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Country [3]
291075
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New Zealand
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Primary sponsor type
University
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Name
University of Auckland
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Address
Pvt Bag 92019, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142
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Country
New Zealand
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Secondary sponsor category [1]
289753
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Hospital
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Name [1]
289753
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Counties Manukau Health
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Address [1]
289753
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19 Lambie Drive
Manukau 2104
Auckland
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Country [1]
289753
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New Zealand
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Ethics approval
Ethics application status
Approved
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Ethics committee name [1]
292658
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Health & Disability Ethics Committee
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Ethics committee address [1]
292658
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C/ MEDSAFE, PO Box 5013, Wellington 6011
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Ethics committee country [1]
292658
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New Zealand
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Date submitted for ethics approval [1]
292658
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Approval date [1]
292658
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22/12/2014
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Ethics approval number [1]
292658
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14/STH/205
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Summary
Brief summary
One third of New Zealand children are overweight or obese, with much higher rates among Pacific and Maori children (51% and 43%, respectively) who form about half the population in Counties Manukau district, South Auckland (our research area). In pregnant obese women (40% in Counties Manukau), unborn babies are exposed to excess nutrients inside the womb, making them more likely to be born large and become obese as children and adults. When obese women gain excessive weight during pregnancy (the majority) or develop gestational diabetes mellitus, problems for the baby are compounded. An important first step to breaking this vicious intergenerational cycle is to develop successful interventions for obese women starting in early pregnancy. If excessive pregnancy weight gain can be limited maternal and infant health may be improved. The proposed demonstration project will recruit obese women in early pregnancy and will test two novel, practical interventions: (1) a culturally appropriate, affordable, sustainable dietary education intervention; and (2) probiotic/placebo capsules. This demonstration project is an important first step to gaining insight into dietary interventions that may work in the South Auckland population, which has one of the highest rates of obesity in the world.
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Trial website
In development- not yet live. www.humba.auckland.ac.nz
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Trial related presentations / publications
Nil at present time
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Public notes
Nil at present time
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Contacts
Principal investigator
Name
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Prof Lesley ME McCowan
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Address
56266
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Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Faculty of Medical and Health Science,
University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1010
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Country
56266
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New Zealand
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Phone
56266
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+64-21-243-8402
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Fax
56266
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+64-9-303-5969
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Email
56266
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[email protected]
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Contact person for public queries
Name
56267
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Lesley ME McCowan
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Address
56267
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Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Faculty of Medical and Health Science,
University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1010
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Country
56267
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New Zealand
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Phone
56267
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+64-21-243-8402
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Fax
56267
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+64-9-303-5969
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Email
56267
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[email protected]
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Contact person for scientific queries
Name
56268
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Lesley ME McCowan
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Address
56268
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Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Faculty of Medical and Health Science,
University of Auckland
Private Bag 92019
Auckland 1010
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Country
56268
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New Zealand
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Phone
56268
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+64-21-243-8402
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Fax
56268
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+64-9-303-5969
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Email
56268
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[email protected]
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No information has been provided regarding IPD availability
What supporting documents are/will be available?
No Supporting Document Provided
Results publications and other study-related documents
Documents added manually
Type
Is Peer Reviewed?
DOI
Citations or Other Details
Attachment
Study results article
Yes
Culliney K, McCowan LME, Okesene-Gafa K, Murphy R,...
[
More Details
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Study results article
Yes
deleted
Study results article
Yes
Okesene-Gafa KAM, Li M, McKinlay CJD, Taylor RS, R...
[
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-38-36)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Bradford B, Cronin R, McKinlay C, Thompson J, McCo...
[
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-41-36)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Okesene-Gafa K, McCowan L, McKinlay CJD, Neilsen D...
[
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-46-49)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Krishnan M, Murphy R, Okesene-Gafa KAM, Ji M, Thom...
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More Details
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-50-04)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Asadi S, Bloomfield FH, McKinlay CJD, Rush ED, Har...
[
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-51-39)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
De Seymour JV, Jones MB, Okesene-Gafa KAM, McKinla...
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-52-43)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Thesis by Julia P Dawe; Supervisor Anna Serlachius...
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-54-21)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Dawe JP, McCowan LME, Wilson J, Okesene-Gafa KAM, ...
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-55-21)-Journal results publication.pdf
Study results article
Yes
Thesis by Annabelle Emma Brown, Supervisor C Wall....
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368302-(Uploaded-10-12-2020-12-56-29)-Journal results publication.pdf
Documents added automatically
Source
Title
Year of Publication
DOI
Embase
A randomised controlled demonstration trial of multifaceted nutritional intervention and or probiotics: The healthy mums and babies (HUMBA) trial.
2016
https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12884-016-1149-8
Embase
The Pacific-specific CREBRF rs373863828 allele protects against gestational diabetes mellitus in Maori and Pacific women with obesity.
2020
https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-020-05202-8
Embase
Use of healthcare resources and family planning methods 12 months after birth in women of South Auckland: The Healthy Mums and Babies (HUMBA) randomised trial.
2023
N.B. These documents automatically identified may not have been verified by the study sponsor.
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