Mindfulness and Behavior Change to Improve Cardiovascular Health of Older People With HIV

Purpose

Older people with HIV (OPWH) are disproportionately impacted by cardiovascular disease (CVD) attributable to behavioral risk factors, and chronic HIV immune dysregulation resulting inflammation. Systemic inflammation is exacerbated by psychological distress via activating the immune response and driving pro-inflammatory CVD risk behaviors. There is promising evidence to suggest that mindfulness could be an effective intervention to reduce psychological distress and support behaviorally- and inflammatory-mediated CVD risk reduction. This project aims to refine and synthesize mindfulness and behavior change content from evidence-based protocols (mindfulness-based stress reduction and diabetes prevention program) to develop and pilot test a new text message-enhanced intervention called "One Mind One Heart" (OM-OH) using feedback from semi-structured interviews with OPWH in psychological distress (N=20), and my multidisciplinary mentorship team (Aim 1). An open pilot (N=5) with exit interviews and pre-post self-report assessments, will inform the initial acceptability of OM-OH and further refine OM-OH as needed (Aim 2). Finally, a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT; N=50) will be conducted to a.) evaluate benchmarks of feasibility and acceptability of study methods and refined OM-OH compared to enhanced usual care, and b.) investigate potential for effects on psychological distress, inflammation, and behavioral CVD risk (Aim 3). Findings will provide the foundation for an R01 application to conduct an efficacy trial of OM-OH to reduce inflammatory-mediated CVD risk among OPWH.

Conditions

  • Hiv
  • Cardiovascular Diseases

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 50 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Yes

Inclusion Criteria

  1. age ≥50 years 2. clinical diagnosis of HIV per medical record or provision of current antiretroviral medication prescription 3. viral suppression - i.e., lower than detectable limit - per medical record or provision of viral load test from the past six months 4. current elevated psychological distress (score ≥10 on 10-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale [K10]) screener) 5. ≥1 CVD risk factor (based on ACC/AHA Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk Score Calculator; e.g., diabetes, current smoker, hypertension, and high cholesterol 6. access to cell phone with text messaging capabilities

Exclusion Criteria

  1. non-English-speaking 2. cognitive impairments preventing informed consent 3. untreated or under-treated serious mental illness (i.e., psychosis and bipolar disorder) based on clinical interview

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Prevention
Masking
Single (Participant)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
One-Mind One-Heart
One-Mind One-Heart (OM-OH) is intended to be a mindfulness-based, behavior change intervention to reduce psychological and behavioral cardiovascular disease risk.
  • Behavioral: One-Mind One-Heart
    One-Mind One-Heart will include mindfulness and behavior change skills to address psychological distress, physical activity, diet, and substance use.
Active Comparator
Education
The education session will provide information on behaviors important for cardiovascular disease risk reduction.
  • Other: Education
    Education will be provided on behavioral cardiovascular disease risk reduction strategies, such as increasing physical activity, reducing salt intake in diet, and reduce/stop alcohol and tobacco-use.

Recruiting Locations

Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts 02114
Contact:
Jacklyn Foley, PhD

More Details

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital

Study Contact

Jacklyn Foley, PhD
857-347-5312
jdfoley@mgh.harvard.edu