# DOES LIFESTYLE INTERVENTION IN OBESE OLDER ADULTS IMPROVE BONE QUALITY?

> **NIH NIH R01** · BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE · 2022 · $675,551

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
Despite the serious public health problem of obesity in older adults, the appropriate treatment approach for
obese older adults remains highly controversial. A prevailing safety concern is that weight loss could cause
further loss of bone mineral density (BMD) and increase the risk of bone fractures. Indeed, recent studies have
shown that lifestyle therapy (diet plus exercise) resulting in weight loss in this understudied population
improves physical function, cardiometabolic risk factors, and cognition, but a major complication appears to be
loss of BMD. The addition of exercise to diet-induced weight loss attenuated but did not eliminate weight-loss-
induced reduction of BMD. Previous studies, however, used dual-energy-x-ray-absorptiometry to monitor bone
changes, which provides information on bone quantity but not bone quality. Bone quality refers to the material
and structural properties of bone strength. The load-bearing capacity of a bone depends not only on the
amount of bone but also on the spatial distribution and intrinsic properties of the materials that comprise the
bone. Because of previous lack of options to assess bone quality in vivo, there has been little or no scientific
study of the possibility that lifestyle change in obese older adults improves bone quality. Preliminary studies
suggest that lifestyle therapy may improve bone quality despite reducing BMD by suppressing inflammation.
 This will be the first randomized controlled trial (RCT) in obese older adults to comprehensively
examine the effects of lifestyle therapy on bone quality using state-of-the-art and novel techniques. One-
hundred-twenty obese older adults will be randomized to 1 year of lifestyle intervention or healthy lifestyle
(control) to test the following primary hypotheses: 1) lifestyle therapy will improve bone microarchitecture in
obese older adults relative to a control condition, 2) lifestyle therapy will improve femoral bone strength in
obese older adults relative to a control condition, and 3) lifestyle therapy will improve bone material strength in
obese older adults relative to a control condition. The secondary hypothesis is that changes in the canonical
Wnt signaling (↓ sclerostin, an inhibitor of bone formation during states of unloading) and noncanonical Wnt
signaling (↓ Wnt5A/Sfrp5 and inflammation) may mediate the changes in bone quality during lifestyle therapy.
 The central hypothesis is that lifestyle intervention will be highly successful in obese older adults with
resultant improvement in the material and structural properties of bone (i.e. bone quality) despite a reduction in
BMD. The track record of the investigative team in lifestyle interventions in obese older adults, coupled with the
Bone Imaging Core Resources at the Center for Translational Research on Inflammatory Diseases at Baylor
College of Medicine and Michael E DeBakey VA Medical Center, represents an unprecedented opportunity to
prove the hypothesis that lifestyle ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10401749
- **Project number:** 5R01DK109950-05
- **Recipient organization:** BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE
- **Principal Investigator:** DENNIS T. VILLAREAL
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2022
- **Award amount:** $675,551
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2017-06-01 → 2025-05-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10401749

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10401749, DOES LIFESTYLE INTERVENTION IN OBESE OLDER ADULTS IMPROVE BONE QUALITY? (5R01DK109950-05). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-23 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10401749. Licensed CC0.

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