GODART Pilot and Feasibility

Last updated: March 31, 2025
Sponsor: University of Alabama at Birmingham
Overall Status: Active - Not Recruiting

Phase

N/A

Condition

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

Treatment

Adapted Reward Level

Weekly Automated Health Coaching

Weekly Human Health Coaching

Clinical Study ID

NCT05344859
IRB-300008752
5R01DK129378-02
5R01DK129378-03
  • Ages > 18
  • All Genders

Study Summary

The purpose of this study is to pilot and assess the feasibility of implementing an artificial intelligence-assisted individualized lifestyle modification intervention for glycemic control in rural populations, which can be delivered even with regular landline phone service. This study will provide us with the knowledge to plan a well-powered optimization trial in the future to develop an optimal (low-cost) intervention package that can be delivered in a sustainable manner to the rural portions of America.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. a diagnosis of T2DM

  2. HbA1C ≥7% to ≤ 10.5% for phase 1- 14 days and phase 2 of the study- 6 months.

  3. ≥18 years of age

  4. the ability to converse in and read English.

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Present or soon-planned pregnancy

  2. Current enrollment in any structured lifestyle intervention study for diabetes orweight management.

  3. Patients currently on insulin treatment

  4. Major cardiac event in the past 6 months

  5. Renal failure in the past 6 months

  6. Listening and Speaking Impairment

Study Design

Total Participants: 108
Treatment Group(s): 4
Primary Treatment: Adapted Reward Level
Phase:
Study Start date:
May 15, 2023
Estimated Completion Date:
January 31, 2026

Study Description

Evidence-based guidelines for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) management aimed at glycemic control (reduced hemoglobin A1c) include a combination of diet, physical activity (PA), glucose monitoring, and medication adherences. However, the majority of individuals with T2DM are unable to follow these guidelines due to a lack of consistent health behavior counseling offered in the primary care setting. This problem is amplified in remote rural communities within the U.S. In response, this project aims to create an optimized telehealth-based intervention - Gamified Optimized Diabetes management with Artificial Intelligence-powered Rural Telehealth (GODART). GODART is grounded in the social cognitive theory and will serve as an automated behavior-monitoring and telecoaching platform. At the core, GODART is an automated conversational-style behavior-monitoring system using natural language-understanding technologies. In this project, we propose to pilot and feasibility test the various components of GODART by leveraging a multiphase optimization strategy (MOST). MOST is an efficient and rigorous resource-management and continuous- improvement framework for developing optimized interventions. Our proposal focuses on the MOST preparatory phase and will use full factorial experimentation. We will pilot and assess the feasibility of and evaluate two different intervention components, with two levels in each of the groups, yielding four experimental conditions. These groups will test the effect of (i) a fixed vs. adaptive (gamified) rewards program and (ii) automated vs. human-delivered weekly health coaching. We will end the project with exit interviews conducted with a subset of participants. Study findings will help us learn the feasibility of delivering such an intervention and its preliminary effectiveness in reducing HbA1c, leading to adequately powered confirmatory effectiveness studies.

Participants will be enrolled in the study in 2 phases:

Phase 1-The Feasibility Phase: Up to 16 participants will be enrolled in this phase of the study. Participants will be in the study for a duration of 14 days. This phase of the study is conducted to access the feasibility, usability, and accessibility of the GODART platform, before the actual intervention phase.

Phase 2- Intervention Phase: 88 participants will be enrolled in this phase of the study for a duration of 6 months.

Connect with a study center

  • Department of Family and Community Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham

    Birmingham, Alabama 35205
    United States

    Site Not Available

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