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Behavioral Counseling Interventions to Promote a Healthy Diet and Physical Activity for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention in Adults Without Known Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors: Updated Evidence Report and Systematic Review for the US Preventive Services Task Force.

JAMA
July 26, 2022
Carrie D Patnode et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleMeta-AnalysisSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

To synthesize evidence on the benefits and harms of behavioral counseling interventions promoting a healthy diet and physical activity in adults without known cardiovascular disease risk factors.

Results Summary

Behavioral counseling interventions were associated with small but statistically significant improvements in blood pressure, cholesterol levels, adiposity-related outcomes, dietary habits, and physical activity. Limited evidence showed no significant differences in CVD outcomes in one large study, but two smaller studies found significant reductions in fatal and nonfatal CVD events.

Population

Adults without known elevated blood pressure, elevated lipid levels, or impaired fasting glucose.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

6 months to 13.4 years (follow-up periods varied)

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (10)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthy diet and physical activity
no change
any CVD outcome
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
no significant differences
found no significant differences between groups
#1
behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthy diet and physical activity
decrease
nonfatal CVD events
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
hazard ratio, 0.27 [95% CI, 0.08 to 0.88]
found a statistically significant association
#2
behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthy diet and physical activity
decrease
fatal CVD events
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
hazard ratio, 0.31 [95% CI, 0.11 to 0.93]
found a statistically significant association
#3
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
decrease
continuous measures of blood pressure (systolic)
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
mean difference, -0.8 [95% CI, -1.3 to -0.3]
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#4
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
decrease
continuous measures of blood pressure (diastolic)
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
mean difference, -0.4 [95% CI, -0.8 to -0.0]
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#5
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
decrease
low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
mean difference, 2.2 mg/dL [95% CI, -3.8 to -0.6]
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#6
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
decrease
adiposity-related outcomes (body mass index)
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
mean difference, -0.3 [95% CI, -0.5 to -0.1]
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#7
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
decrease
dietary outcomes
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
-
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#8
Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions
increase
physical activity
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
-
were associated with small, statistically significant reductions
#9
behavioral counseling interventions
no change
harms
adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors
no evidence of greater harm
There was no evidence of greater harm
#10
Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Unhealthful dietary patterns, low levels of physical activity, and high sedentary time increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. OBJECTIVE: To synthesize the evidence on benefits and harms of behavioral counseling interventions to promote a healthy diet and physical activity in adults without known cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors to inform a US Preventive Services Task Force recommendation. DATA SOURCES: MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials through February 2021, with ongoing surveillance through February 2022. STUDY SELECTION: Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) of behavioral counseling interventions targeting improved diet, increased physical activity, or decreased sedentary time among adults without known elevated blood pressure, elevated lipid levels, or impaired fasting glucose. DATA EXTRACTION AND SYNTHESIS: Independent data abstraction and study quality rating and random effects meta-analysis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: CVD events, CVD risk factors, diet and physical activity measures, and harms. RESULTS: One-hundred thirteen RCTs were included (N = 129 993). Three RCTs reported CVD-related outcomes: 1 study (n = 47 179) found no significant differences between groups on any CVD outcome at up to 13.4 years of follow-up; a combined analysis of the other 2 RCTs (n = 1203) found a statistically significant association of the intervention with nonfatal CVD events (hazard ratio, 0.27 [95% CI, 0.08 to 0.88]) and fatal CVD events (hazard ratio, 0.31 [95% CI, 0.11 to 0.93]) at 4 years. Diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions were associated with small, statistically significant reductions in continuous measures of blood pressure (systolic mean difference, -0.8 [95% CI, -1.3 to -0.3]; 23 RCTs [n = 57 079]; diastolic mean difference, -0.4 [95% CI, -0.8 to -0.0]; 24 RCTs [n = 57 148]), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level (mean difference, 2.2 mg/dL [95% CI, -3.8 to -0.6]; 15 RCTs [n = 6350]), adiposity-related outcomes (body mass index mean difference, -0.3 [95% CI, -0.5 to -0.1]; 27 RCTs [n = 59 239]), dietary outcomes, and physical activity at 6 months to 1.5 years of follow-up vs control conditions. There was no evidence of greater harm among intervention vs control groups. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Healthy diet and physical activity behavioral counseling interventions for persons without a known risk of CVD were associated with small but statistically significant benefits across a variety of important intermediate health outcomes and small to moderate effects on dietary and physical activity behaviors. There was limited evidence regarding the long-term health outcomes or harmful effects of these interventions.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAdvisory CommitteesBehavior TherapyCardiovascular DiseasesCounselingDiet, HealthyExerciseHumansPreventive Health ServicesRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicSedentary BehaviorUnited States
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations45
Citations/Year15.0
Relative Citation Ratio4.52
NIH Percentile91.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score3.06
Normalized Score0.83
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