4.7 Article

Weight gain prevention interventions in the Study of Novel Approaches to Weight Gain Prevention (SNAP) trial promote ideal cardiovascular health in young adults

Journal

OBESITY
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages 1530-1537

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/oby.23753

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This study examined whether weight gain prevention interventions could improve cardiovascular health in young adults. The results showed that both interventions led to improvements in ideal cardiovascular health at the 2-year follow-up. However, interventions targeting a broader range of factors may lead to even greater changes.
ObjectiveCardiovascular health (CVH) declines in young adulthood. This study assessed whether weight gain prevention interventions promoted ideal CVH. MethodsYoung adults (n = 599; age 18-35 years; BMI: 21.0-30.9 kg/m(2)) from a randomized controlled trial comparing two weight gain prevention interventions (self-regulation with large or small changes) and a self-guided control group completed anthropometric and clinical assessments at baseline and 2 years. CVH was quantified via the American Heart Association's Life's Simple 7 (LS7) number of ideal components met. ResultsBoth interventions showed significant improvements in the average number of ideal LS7 components met at 2 years compared with control (pre- to post-treatment means; large change: 0.24, small change: 0.34, control: -0.2, p < 0.05). Moreover, a greater percentage of participants in both interventions improved by >= 1 ideal component (large change: 35%, small change: 37%, control: 29%) and a smaller percentage declined by >= 1 ideal component (large change: 16%, small change: 20%, control: 30%) compared with control. For individual LS7 components, the odds of having an ideal BMI and glucose varied by treatment condition at 2 years. ConclusionsTwo weight gain prevention interventions led to improvements in ideal CVH at 2 years. Interventions explicitly focused on a broader constellation of LS7 domains might lead to even greater changes in CVH.

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