Effectiveness of DialBetesPlus, a self-management support system for diabetic kidney disease: Randomized controlled trial

Author:

Waki KayoORCID,Nara MitsuhikoORCID,Enomoto SyunpeiORCID,Mieno Makiko,Kanda Eiichiro,Sankoda Akiko,Kawai Yuki,Miyake Kana,Wakui Hiromichi,Tsurutani Yuya,Hirawa Nobuhito,Yamakawa Tadashi,Komiya Shiro,Isogawa Akihiro,Satoh Shinobu,Minami Taichi,Iwamoto Tamio,Takano Tatsuro,Terauchi Yasuo,Tamura KouichiORCID,Yamauchi Toshimasa,Nangaku Masaomi,Kashihara Naoki,Ohe Kazuhiko

Abstract

AbstractWe evaluated the effectiveness of a mobile health (mHealth) intervention for diabetic kidney disease patients by conducting a 12-month randomized controlled trial among 126 type 2 diabetes mellitus patients with moderately increased albuminuria (urinary albumin-to-creatinine ratio (UACR): 30-299 mg/g creatinine) recruited from eight clinical sites in Japan. Using a Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) behavior change theory framework, the intervention provides patients detailed information in order to improve patient control over exercise and dietary behaviors. In addition to standard care, the intervention group received DialBetesPlus, a self-management support system allowing patients to monitor exercise, blood glucose, diet, blood pressure, and body weight via a smartphone application. The primary outcome, change in UACR after 12 months (used as a surrogate measure of renal function), was 28.8% better than the control group’s change (P = 0.029). Secondary outcomes also improved in the intervention group, including a 0.32-point better change in HbA1c percentage (P = 0.041). These improvements persisted when models were adjusted to account for the impacts of coadministration of drugs targeting albuminuria (GLP-1 receptor agonists, SGLT-2 inhibitors, ACE inhibitors, and ARBs) (UACR: −32.3% [95% CI: −49.2%, −9.8%] between-group difference in change, P = 0.008). Exploratory multivariate regression analysis suggests that the improvements were primarily due to levels of exercise. This is the first trial to show that a lifestyle intervention via mHealth achieved a clinically-significant improvement in moderately increased albuminuria.

Funder

Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

In addition to the AMED grant, this research was supported by NTT DOCOMO Inc. and Nihon Chouzai Co, Ltd.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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