Multi-modal integrated intervention combining exercise, anti-inflammatory, and dietary advice (MMIEAD) for adults with kidney cachexia: protocol for a mixed-methods feasibility cluster randomised controlled trial and process evaluation.

👤 Authors: Joanne Reid, Carolyn Blair, Adrian Slee, Clare McKeaveney, Alexander P Maxwell, Vicki Adell, Marion Carson, Faizan Awan, Malcolm Brown, Andrew Davenport, Damian Fogarty, Denis Fouque, Oonagh Gooding, Teresa McKinley, Samantha Hagan, Carolyn Hutchinson, Kamyar Kalantar-Zadeh, Karen Magee, Robert Mullan, Neal Morgan, Helen Noble, Sam Porter, David S Seres, Joanne Shields, Ian Swaine, Miles Witham

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND

Kidney cachexia is a debilitating and under-recognised complication of advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD), characterised by unintentional weight loss, muscle wasting, inflammation, and reduced functional capacity. Its profound impact on morbidity, quality of life, and healthcare utilisation underscores the need for targeted, implementable interventions.

The multicomponent implementation strategy for a multi-modal, integrated, exercise, anti-inflammatory, and dietary advice (MMIEAD) intervention seeks to address this gap. Guided by the practical, robust implementation, and sustainability model (PRISM), which incorporates reach, effectiveness, adoption, implementation, and maintenance (RE-AIM) outcomes, this study aims to ensure strong intervention-context alignment to support future scalability.

METHODS

The MMIEAD model will be evaluated by determining patient eligibility and recruitment rates, identifying intervention retention and adherence, assessing key statistical and methodological considerations to inform optimal study design and data collection burden, conducting a qualitative process evaluation to examine intervention acceptability and practicality, and determining the feasibility of undertaking a definitive economic evaluation.

DESIGN

This mixed-methods study consists of three phases.

Phase 1 will deliver and evaluate a 12-week multimodal intervention using a feasibility cluster randomised controlled trial (cRCT) design. Phase 2 will undertake a qualitative process evaluation with healthcare practitioners (HCPs) and patients.

Phase 3 will assess the feasibility of conducting a full economic evaluation.

PARTICIPANTS

Patients will be eligible if they have haemodialysis-dependent CKD stage 5 for more than 3 months, have experienced unintentional weight loss of at least 5% in the previous 12 months, or have a body mass index <20 kg/m 2, and are aged over 18 years. HCPs will be eligible if they are members of the multidisciplinary healthcare team for more than 3 months and have had exposure to the study.

SETTING AND RANDOMISATION

The study will be conducted across four outpatient haemodialysis units in the UK.

Two sites have been randomly allocated to the intervention group and two to the control group.

SAMPLE

For phases 1 and 3, a total of 40 patient participants will be recruited (10 per intervention site and 10 per control site). For phase 2, qualitative data will be collected through interviews with approximately 15 patients and interviews or focus groups with 15 HCPs across all sites.

Recruitment commenced on 08.09.25 following ethical approval (REC reference: 25/NI/0069).

DISCUSSION

Using multi-method analyses informed by PRISM/RE-AIM dimensions, we will generate evidence on the feasibility, acceptability, and contextual fit of the MMIEAD intervention to prepare for a definitive UK-wide multi-site cRCT.

TRIAL REGISTRATION

Trial registration number NCT07107087 (30 July 2025). https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT07107087.

Joanne Reid

Palliative Medicine

Queen's University Belfast

United Kingdom

502

ScienceLeadR Reputation
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Main topics

Publications Clinical Trials

Cachexia
Music Therapy
Cancer-associated cachexia
Palliative Care
Weight Loss
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Carolyn Blair

Cardiology

Queen's University Belfast

United Kingdom

86

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Main topics

Publications Clinical Trials

Wasting Syndrome
Cachexia
Weight Loss
Palliative Care
Body Weight
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Adrian Slee

Nutrition

University College London

United Kingdom

141

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Main topics

Publications Clinical Trials

Cachexia
Sarcopenia
Malnutrition
Weight Loss
Feeding and Eating Disorders
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