| Literature DB >> 26929625 |
Athanasios Tselebis1, Argyro Pachi1, Ioannis Ilias2, Epaminondas Kosmas3, Dionisios Bratis1, Georgios Moussas1, Nikolaos Tzanakis4.
Abstract
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic inflammatory lung disease characterized by progressive and only partially reversible symptoms. Worldwide, the incidence of COPD presents a disturbing continuous increase. Anxiety and depression are remarkably common in COPD patients, but the evidence about optimal approaches for managing psychological comorbidities in COPD remains unclear and largely speculative. Pharmacological treatment based on selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors has almost replaced tricyclic antidepressants. The main psychological intervention is cognitive behavioral therapy. Of particular interest are pulmonary rehabilitation programs, which can reduce anxiety and depressive symptoms in these patients. Although the literature on treating anxiety and depression in patients with COPD is limited, we believe that it points to the implementation of personalized strategies to address their psychopathological comorbidities.Entities:
Keywords: COPD; anxiety; depression; pharmacological treatment; psychotherapy
Year: 2016 PMID: 26929625 PMCID: PMC4755471 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S79354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Pharmacological treatment for anxiety and depression in COPD patients
| Source | Study design | Sample size (n) | Comparison | Measurement instruments | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Momtaz et al | Placebo-controlled | n=50 stage III and IV COPD patients with depression and/or anxiety | Fluoxetine 20 mg for 3 months vs placebo | MADRS, HAM-A | Significant improvement in both anxiety and depression in MADRS and HAM-A scores after 3 months of treatment |
| He et al | RCT | n=120 patients with stable COPD with moderate or severe depression | Sertraline hydrochloride 50 mg/d for 6 weeks vs placebo | HAMD-17, 6MWD, CAT | Patients in the sertraline hydrochloride group showed more changes in the HAMD-17 scores and CAT scores after treatment and 6MWD than in the placebo group |
| Eiser et al | RCT | n=28 stable outpatients with COPD stage II and III and depression (ICD-10) | Paroxetine 20 mg vs placebo for 6 weeks, unblinded paroxetine for 3 months | HADS, BDI, MADRS, SGRQ, 6MWD | Treatment produced no significant differences, although overall improvements in depression correlated with 6MWD. Five patients developed side effects. 3 months of unblinded treatment, significantly improved depression (HADS, BDI, MADRS), and 6MWD, SGRQ scores |
| Lacasse et al | RCT | n=23 outpatients with COPD (average stage III), and significant depressive symptoms. 15 completed ( | Paroxetine 20 mg vs placebo, for 12 weeks | GDS, SF-36, CRQ | Clinical and statistical improvement in emotional and mastery domains of CRQ. Nonsignificant improvement in GDS |
| Subbe et al | RCT | n=8 COPD patients, 4 with baseline anxiety | Citalopram 10–20 mg vs placebo, for 3 months and 1 week | HADS, SGRQ | Anxiety scores were not significantly reduced for the intervention as compared with placebo; however, power was very limited. SGRQ scores demonstrated a clinically relevant, but inconclusive effect, favoring placebo |
| Yohannes et al | Single-blinded, open study | n=57 COPD patients stage II and III and depression. | Fluoxetine for 6 months, 20 mg/d | GMS and MADRS, MRADL, BPQ | 7 completed trial, 4 responded to fluoxetine treatment. 5 withdrew because of adverse side effects. 19 of those who refused treatment were still depressed |
| Smoller et al | Case series | n=COPD patients (severity not reported) | Sertraline (25–100 mg/d) for 4 weeks to 1 year | Not formally assessed | Clinician-reported improvement |
| Evans et al | RCT | n=42 physically ill elderly depressed patients completed trial, 38 with respiratory diseases | Fluoxetine vs placebo for 8 weeks, 20 mg/d | HAMD-17, ELDRS, GMS | No significant difference between groups in response rate. Trend for fluoxetine group to respond better than controls after 8 weeks (subjective report). Significantly more recovery from depression after 5 or more weeks on fluoxetine |
| Papp et al | Case series | n=6 consecutive COPD (severity not reported) outpatients | Sertraline titrated to 100 mg, for 6 weeks | Not formally assessed | Clinician-reported improvement |
| Singh et al | Crossover study | n=11 stable COPD patients, at least stage II and STAI >50 | Buspirone, 30–60 mg vs placebo, for 6 weeks | STAI, 12MWD | No significant differences in either exercise or anxiety scores |
| Argyropoulou et al | Double-blind crossover randomized trial | n=16 COPD patients, FEV1/FVC 50.7%±15.0% | Buspirone 20 mg for 14 days | SCL-90-R, 6MWD and WRmax | Reduced anxiety and depression Increased 6MWD and WRmax |
| Ström et al | RCT | n=26 stable COPD patients, at least stage II. Five completed trial | Protriptyline vs placebo for 12 weeks, 10 mg/d | HADS, MACL, SIP | No improvement in depression, anxiety, or QoL scores. High rates of anticholinergic side effects |
| Borson et al | RCT | n=36 in patients with COPD stage II and III and comorbid depressive disorder. N=30, | Nortriptyline vs placebo for 12 weeks increased weekly until 1 mg/kg of body weight | CGI, HADS, PRAS, 12MWD, PFSI, SIP | Improvements for nortriptyline group in depression, anxiety, respiratory symptoms, physical comfort, and day-to-day functioning. No change in physiological measures |
| Sharma et al | Double-blind method | n=10 consecutive COPD patients (all stages) | Imipramine-diazepam combination | Not formally assessed | Helped depressed patients recover faster, but diazepam may trigger respiratory failure |
| Light et al | RCT | n=12 outpatients with COPD stage III and high levels of depression. n=9 completed trial | Doxepin hydrochloride vs placebo for 6 weeks | BDI, 12MWD, STAI | No significant improvements in exercise capacity or depression and anxiety scores. Increase in 12MWD correlated with improvements in depression or anxiety |
| Gordon et al | RCT | n=13, stable COPD outpatients stage III. n=6 completed trial | Desipramine vs placebo for 8 weeks | BDI and Zung Self-rating Depression Scale | Depression scores improved significantly after treatment with placebo and with desipramine. No effect on physiological measures |
Abbreviations: BAI, Beck anxiety inventory; BDI, Beck depression inventory; BDI-II, Beck depression inventory 1996 revision; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HAM-A, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale; HAMD-17, 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; MADRS, Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale; STAI, Spielberger’s state–trait anxiety inventory; GDS, Geriatric Depression Scale; GMS, geriatric mental state; CGI, Clinical Global Improvement Scale; ELDRS, Evans Liverpool Depression Rating Scale; MACL, mood adjective checklist; BPQ, Breathing Problems Questionnaire; CRQ, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (COPD disease-specific QoL inventory); CAT, COPD assessment test; 6MWD, 6-minute walk distance; 12MWD, 12-minute walk distance; WRmax, maximum work-rate; PFSI, Pulmonary Functional Status Instrument; PRAS, Patient-rated Anxiety Scale; MRADL, Manchester Respiratory Activities of Daily Living Questionnaire; QoL, quality of life; SGRQ, St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire; SF-36, 36-item Short Form Health Survey; SIP, sickness impact profile; RCT, randomized controlled trial; I, intervention group; C, control group; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; ICD-10, International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision; SCL-90-R, Hopkins Symptoms Checklist Revised; WE, wellness education; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity.
Cognitive behavioral therapy in COPD patients
| Source | Study design | Sample size (n) | Comparison | Measurement instruments | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bove et al | RCT | Minimal home-based CBT psychoeducative session in combination with a telephone booster session vs usual care | HADS-A, SGRQ, CRQ-M | Ongoing – currently recruiting participants | |
| Howard and Dupont | RCT | Cognitive behavioral manual vs information booklets, at home over 5 weeks | HADS, CRQ-SR | At 6 months, there were significantly greater improvements in anxiety, depression, and dyspnea in the CBT intervention group | |
| Jiang and He | RCT | Uncertainty management vs standard care: 4 sessions of 35 minutes, once per week over 4 weeks | SSAI, STAI, HADS-D | Compared to the control group, the intervention group showed significant improvement in anxiety, depression scores, and QoL | |
| Kapella et al | RCT | N=23, | 6 sessions of CBT-I vs WE program | POMS-D, POMS-A | Significant positive treatment-related effects of the CBT-I intervention were noted for insomnia severity, global sleep quality, wake after sleep onset, sleep efficiency, fatigue, and beliefs and attitudes about sleep. Significant positive effects were noted for depressed mood after WE program |
| Hynninen et al | RCT | CBT vs enhanced standard care: 7 sessions of 2 hours of group CBT over 7 weeks | BAI, BDI-II | CBT resulted in improvement in symptoms of anxiety and depression. The improvement was maintained at 8-month follow-up. In the control group, there was no significant change | |
| Livermore et al | RCT | CBT vs routine care: 4 individualized 1-hour sessions and strategies effective for the prevention and treatment of panic disorder | HADS | Significant differences post intervention at 6-, 12-, and 18-month follow-ups, favoring the CBT group. At each follow-up, mean anxiety scores for the CBT group were in the nonclinical range, while mean scores for the routine care group were above the cutoff score | |
| Lamers et al | RCT | Minimal psychological intervention (4 individualized 2 hours CBT and skills training) vs usual care | SCL-A, BDI | Intervention group showed lower symptoms of anxiety and depression and improved QoL measures compared to control group | |
| Kunik et al | RCT | CBT vs COPD education: Intervention: 8×1 hour CBT group sessions, control: 8×1 hour COPD education sessions | BAI, BDI-II | CBT or COPD education, significantly improved QoL, anxiety, and depression over 8 weeks; the rate of change did not differ between groups. Improvements were maintained with no significant change during follow-up | |
| Blumenthal et al | RCT | 12 weeks of 30-minute telephone-based CST vs UMC | BDI, STAI | Compared with UMC, CST produced lower scores on perceived stress, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and negative affect and improved scores on mental health functioning, optimism, vitality, and perceived social support | |
| de Godoy et al | RCT | n=49 (G1=19, G2=16, G3=14) consecutive patients with COPD stage II and III. Mild-to- moderate levels of anxiety and depression | 12-week treatment. G1: PRP (physical exercise, individual psychotherapy sessions, group educational sessions, physical therapy); vs G2:PRP without physical exercise; vs G3: PRP without psychotherapy | BAI, BDI, SGRQ | G1 and G2 patients improved in anxiety and depression as well as SGRQ and exercise tolerance. G3 improved in anxiety |
| de Godoy and de Godoy | RCT | n=30 patients stage I–III COPD, attending PR program | PR (12-week treatment program) with psychotherapy vs PR without psychotherapy | BAI, BDI | Including psychotherapy significantly reduced patients’ anxiety and depression levels but did not modify 6MWD performance |
| Kunik et al | RCT | CBT vs COPD education: 1×2-hour session of group CBT vs education session lasting 2 hours | BAI, GDS | Statistical improvement in BAI and GDS | |
| Emery et al | RCT | N=79 (EXESM =29; ESM =25; WL =25) COPD outpatients stage III | EXESM: 37 exercise sessions, 16 education sessions, 10×1-hour stress management sessions based on CBT vs ESM: 16 education sessions, 10×1-hour stress management sessions based on CBT and WL for 10-week period | CES-D, Bradburn Affect Balance Scale; STAI, SCL- 90-R, MHLC, SIP, cognitive assessments | EXESM and WL groups showed reductions in depressive symptoms and SIP scores. |
| Eiser et al | Pilot study | Intervention: six 90 minutes sessions of CBT at weekly intervals vs controls: attended weekly for lung function and 6MWD for 6 weeks, but had no psychotherapy | HADS, 6MWD | Improvement in exercise tolerance in a group of ten anxious patients with severe COPD, without any change in anxiety scores | |
| Coventry et al | Review of 7 RCT studies | N=916 patients, most had moderate-to-severe COPD, with variable psychological morbidity | CBT intervention: 30–120 minutes ×4–12 sessions group or individual face-to-face or remote | BDI, GDS, POMS-A, POMS-D, BAI, SCL-90 | The meta-analysis revealed a small beneficial effect of CBT on both anxiety and depression, neither of which was statistically significant |
| Ramsenthaler et al | Review of 13 RCT studies | COPD patients of all stages with mild-to-severe panic or anxiety symptoms | CBT intervention for the treatment of mild-to-severe anxiety and panic in adult patients with mild-to-severe COPD | Validated instruments of anxiety | 7 of 13 studies reported a significant impact of CBT on anxiety. Six other studies, one of which was an adequately powered RCT, failed to show an improvement in anxiety symptoms. The meta-analyses showed a small effect of CBT on anxiety |
| Baraniak and Sheffield | Review of 9 studies, 4 RCT | N=523 patients, most had moderate-to-severe COPD, with variable psychological morbidity | Individual or group CBT, CBT-based education, individual psychotherapy and muscle relaxation training, over a single 2-hour intervention to 12 weekly sessions vs control groups with education only, PR and exercise, weekly lab tests | Generic and disease-specific QoL and various psychological instruments | Improvement in anxiety scores was reported in 4 out of 9 studies. Four out of 7 studies reported a statistically significant improvement in depression scores. 5 studies considered QoL; findings were mixed and unclear |
| Coventry and Gellatly | Review of RCTs and nonrandomized trials | 3 RCTs (165 patients) and one nonrandomized controlled trial (n=8 patients), with stable and severe COPD and mild-to-moderate anxiety and depression | CBT alone or alongside exercise and/or education; comparators included WL control, standard care, exercise, education, and/or CBT | CES-D, BAI, BDI, HADS, STAI, and several measures of exercise, education, and stress management at 6, 10, and 12 weeks | There was limited evidence that CBT, when used with exercise and education, could contribute to significant reductions in anxiety and depression in patients with clinically stable and severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Only one RCT (30 patients) reported a large statistically significant effect size in favor of CBT; this trial used CBT alongside education and exercise |
Abbreviations: BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory 1996 revision; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HADS-D, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – Depression subscale; STAI, Spielberger’s state–trait anxiety inventory; SSAI, Spielberger’s State Anxiety Inventory; CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; GDS, Geriatric Depression Scale; POMS-A, Profile of Mood States Anxiety Scale; POMS-D, Profile of Mood States Depression Scale; SIP, Sickness Impact Profile; ESM, education and stress management; EXESM, exercise, education and stress management; CRQ-SR, Self-Reported Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire; RCT, randomized controlled trial; WL, waiting list; I, intervention group; C, control group, CBT-I, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia; G1, Group 1; G2, Group 2; G3, Group 3; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; SCL-90-R, Hopkins Symptoms Checklist Revised; MHLC, Multidimensional Health Locus of Control inventory; 6MWD, 6-minute walk distance; PRP, pulmonary rehabilitation program; SGRQ, St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire; CST, coping skills training; UMC, usual medical care; QoL, quality of life; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; MRC, Medical Research Council; HADS-A, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – Anxiety subscale; CRQ-M, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire; SCL-A, Anxiety subscale of the Symptom Checklist-90; WE, wellness education.
Relaxation therapy and alternative treatments
| Source | Study design | Sample size (n) | Comparison | Measurement instruments | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mkacher et al | RCT | 6 months PRP with or without balance training 3 times a week | HADS, SGRQ, 6MWT | Anxiety decreased significantly in both groups with a greater change in the intervention group. Only the intervention group had an improved depression score at the end of 6 months. Both the intervention and PR-only group improved their QoL with a significant intergroup difference | |
| Reychler et al | RCT | N=41 COPD patients entering PRP FEV1: 38.6%±12.5% | One session of PRP with or without ambient music | HADS, Borg scales, dyspnea VAS | Perceived exertion was not modified by ambient music, but anxiety was improved |
| Kaymaz et al | Nonrandomized controlled observational study | HADS, SGRQ, MRC, ISWT, ESWT, MMT | In the | ||
| Valenza et al | RCT | 10-day controlled breathing intervention vs standard care | HADS, SGRQ, MMRC, EQ-5D | Controlled breathing exercises improve anxiety and depression in patients hospitalized for COPD exacerbation | |
| Leung et al | RCT | N=42 COPD patients FEV1: 59%±16% | TCG: short-form Sun-style t’ai chi twice weekly for 12 weeks vs CG: usual medical care | HADS, CRQ, ISWT, ESWT, MPPB, FPI | At study completion, the ESWT time was significantly longer in the TCG than the CG. the TCG had a significant improvement in ISWT, MPPB, FPI, CRQ HADS anxiety domain |
| Santana et al | Prospective observational study | N=25 pre–lung transplant patients, 5 with COPD | Two-phase, 12-week IYP that included 2 hours biweekly classes | HADS, CRQ, HUI, 6MST | Changes in HADS anxiety and CRQ fatigue scores were statistically significant and changes in HUI ambulation, pain, emotion, and overall score were clinically important |
| Lord et al | RCT | N=24 COPD patients | Singing classes twice weekly for 8 weeks vs a film club for 8 weeks, once weekly | HADS, SF-36, CAT | No significant differences between groups in the response of measures of breathing control, functional exercise capacity or daily physical activity. Similar improvements in the mental component score of the SF-36 in both groups. Significant difference between the response of the physical component score favoring the singing group |
| Yeh et al | RCT | 12 weeks 1-hour class, twice weekly of tai chi plus usual care vs usual care alone | CESD, CRQ, 6MW | Significant improvement in CRQ score among the tai chi participants, compared to the usual-care group. There were nonsignificant trends toward improvement in 6MW, CESD scores | |
| Lord et al | RCT | 6-week course of twice- weekly singing classes vs usual care | HADS, SF-36, SGRQ, ISWT | The physical component score of the SF36 improved in the singers compared to the controls. Singers also had a significant fall in HAD anxiety score | |
| Donesky-Cuenco et al | RCT | N=29 stable COPD patients FEV1 47.7%±15.6% | Twice-weekly 12-week yoga program vs usual- care | CESD, SSAI, FPI, SF-36, CRQ, 6MW | After the program, the subjects tolerated more activity with less dyspnea-related distress and improved their functional performance. No significant intergroup difference on CESD, SSAI scores |
| Singh et al | RCT | N=72 COPD patients hospitalized for COPD exacerbation | Music vs PMR. Music group listened to a self-selected music of 60–80 beats per minute for 30 minutes. PMR group practiced relaxation through a prerecorded audio of instructions of 16 muscle groups | SSAI, STAI, physiologic measures | Music and PMR are effective in reducing anxiety and dyspnea along with physiologic measures in two sessions in COPD patients hospitalized with exacerbation. However, reductions in the music group were greater compared to the PMR group |
| Lolak et al | RCT | N=83 COPD patients entering PRP | 8-week PR program 2 days per week with or without PMR – 25 min/wk during weeks 2–8 | HADS | The results favored the PMR group but did not reach statistical significance. Adding structured PMR training to a well-established PR program may not confer additional benefit in the further reduction of anxiety and depression in patients receiving PR |
| Bauldoff et al | Experimental, randomized, two- group design | Instructed to walk at their own pace for 20–45 minutes, 2–5 times a week, using DAS vs no DAS | HADS, ADL, 6MW, QoL | Subjects who used DAS while walking had improved functional performance and decreased perceptions of dyspnea, whereas control subjects could not maintain post- PRP gains. No significant differences were noted for the remaining variables | |
| Sassi-Dambron et al | RCT | 6-week techniques of PMR, breathing retraining, pacing, self- talk, and panic control vs general health education | STAI, CESD, QWB, VAS, Borg scale | A treatment program of dyspnea management strategies, PRP components, is not sufficient to produce significant improvement in dyspnea, exercise tolerance, health-related quality of well- being, anxiety, or depression | |
| Gift et al | RCT | N=26 COPD patients stage II | 4 weeks: 4 sessions, 20 minutes PMR with prerecorded tapes vs sit quietly for 20 minutes | STAI, physiologic measures | Dyspnea, anxiety, and airway obstruction were reduced in the relaxation group while the control group remained the same or became worse |
| Volpato et al | Meta-analysis: 25 RCTs | 1) Relaxation techniques; 2) PMR; 3) guided imagery; 4) distraction therapy; 5) biofeedback; 6) breathing techniques; 7) yoga; 8) Tai Chi; 9) acupressure vs control group | Validated instruments of anxiety, depression, QoL, and physiologic measures | Relaxation techniques showed minor positive effect on the value of the percentage of predicted FEV1, as well as a slight effect on levels of both the anxiety and depression. The higher effect size was found in the QoL value |
Abbreviations: HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; MRC, Medical Research Council; ISWT, incremental shuttle walking test; ESWT, endurance shuttle walking test; SGRQ, St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire; MMT, manual muscle testing; MMRC, Modified Medical Research Council Scale; EQ-5D, European Quality of Life Questionnaire; VAS, visual analog scale; STAI, Spielberger state–trait anxiety inventory; SSAI, Spielberger’s state anxiety inventory; CESD, Center for Epidemiologic Studies’ Depression; QWB, quality of well-being scale; ADL, activities of daily living; 6MW, 6-minute walk distance; HUI, Health Utilities Index; 6MST, 6 minute walk test; SF-36, Medical Outcomes Study Short-Form 36; FPI, Functional Performance Inventory; CAT, COPD assessment test score; MPPB, modified physical performance battery test; I, intervention group; C, control group; PMR, progressive muscle relaxation; QoL, quality of life; TCG, t’ai chi group; CG, control group; DAS, distractive auditory stimuli; CRQ, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire; IYP, Iyengar yoga program; NMES, neuromuscular electrical stimulation; 6MWT, 6-minutes walking test.
Comprehensive PR in COPD patients
| Source | Study design | Sample size (n) | Intervention | Measurement instruments | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luk et al | Prospective cohort study | n=83 patients with COPD who had completed PR, FEV1 mean: 46% | Assessment after 22 months following an 8-week PRP | HADS, CRQ, ISWT | ISWT gain was lost at the long-term reassessment. In CRQ, only the domains of dyspnea and fatigue remained statistically significant, and improvements in HADS scores persisted at the long-term reassessment but were not statistically significant |
| Sciriha et al | Prospective observational study | n=60 COPD patients stage I–IV with MRC grade 2 or above | PRP for 12 weeks 2 hours sessions, twice-weekly | HADS, SGRQ, 6MWT, Borg scale, CAT | Anxiety scoring decreased significantly by 12 weeks, while the depression rating improved by 8 weeks. No significant changes on anxiety ratings for stage III–IV COPD participants as opposed to the milder group of patients who had significant changes after 3 weeks. Participants with an MRC 2–3 had significant changes in depression ratings after 12 weeks of PRP |
| Grosbois et al | Retrospective observational study | n=211 patients with COPD FEV1 mean: 41.5%±17.7% | Home-based PR individually managed once a week for 8 weeks unsupervised on the other days of the week | HADS, 6MST, VSRQ | 6MST was significantly improved after completion of the program, at 6 and 12 months. HADS and VSRQ scores improved after PR, and this improvement persisted at 6 and 12 months |
| Boutou et al | Prospective observational study | n=787 COPD outpatients stage I–IV from 8 PR centers | PRP over 8–12 weeks with two supervised sessions and one or more unsupervised home exercise sessions each week | HAD-A, HAD-D, CRDQ, CAT, 6MWT, ISWT | Significant improvements in 6MWT or ISWT distance. Anxiety and depression scores fell post PR. QoL also improved with significant fall in CAT scores while CRDQ scores increased. Patients who completed PR were significantly older with less severe airflow obstruction, lower anxiety and depression scores, less dyspnea and better HRQoL |
| da Costa et al | Prospective observational study | n=125 COPD patients FEV1 mean: 43.18%±18.79% | PRP of 3 weekly sessions of 60 minutes duration for 12 weeks, a total of 36 sessions | BAI, BDI, SGRQ | Significant decreases in anxiety and depression scores and improvements in QoL were observed. Weak correlations were observed when correlating the BAI to the SGRQ |
| Jácome and Marque | Quasiexperimental study | n=26 COPD patients FEV1 mean: 83.8%±6.4% | 12-week PR program 3 sessions/week, 60 minutes each, with exercise training and psychoeducation | DASS, SGRQ, 6MWT, MMRC, TUG | Significant improvements were observed on 6MWT, MMRC, TUG and SGRQ total scores. No significant improvement in the SGRQ impact score and DASS scores |
| Tselebis et al | Prospective observational study | n=101 stage I–IV COPD patients | PRP for a period of 3 months, with three sessions per week, each lasting 50 minutes | STAI, BDI | Significant decreases in anxiety and depression rates were observed. A statistically significant reduction in anxiety and depression was revealed at all stages of COPD |
| Bhandari et al | Retrospective observational study | n=366 COPD patients FEV1 mean: 47%±17% at program entry, 25% had abnormal anxiety scores and 17% had abnormal depression scores | Sixteen 3-hour sessions given twice weekly over an 8-week outpatient PR program | HADS, CRQ-SR, 6MST | Of the 366 patients, 257 completed the program and 235 completed final outcome evaluation. Among patients who completed PR, there were significant improvements on all dimensions (CRQ-SR, 6MST scores, and reduced HADS scores) |
| Hogg et al | Prospective observational study | n=812 stage I–IV COPD patients were assessed | 656 started PR twice or once weekly for 8 weeks | HADS, ISWT, CRQ, MRC | 441 completed. Significant improvements were seen in ISWT, CRQ-SR and HADS scores. Twice-weekly compared with once-weekly programs showed similar improvement |
| Bentsen et al | Prospective observational study | COPD patients assessed at baseline (T1: N=100), immediately before (T2: N=66), immediately after (T3: N=54) and 3 months after (T4: N=43) | 6-week outpatient PRP, including education, psychosocial support and training sessions | HADS, COPD self-efficacy scale, ISWT | A tendency of less anxiety and depression immediately after (T3) compared with immediately before (T2) the PR program, but the changes were not significant. Higher level of self-efficacy and better exercise capacity are suggested to relieve anxiety and depression |
| Harrison et al | Comparative effectiveness research | n=518 patients with COPD Patients were categorized into 3 groups based on HADS scores pre PR (“none” 0–7, “probable” 8–10 and “presence” 11–21) | PRP twice a week for 7 weeks. A “responder” was defined as achieving a change of ≥48 m on ISWT and a “completer” if attended discharge assessment for PR | HADS, ISWT, CRQ-SR | Anxiety and depression did not reduce following PR in patients with no symptoms. Patients with a “probable” or “presence” of symptoms had significant reductions. There was a difference between subgroups in change for anxiety and depression with patients scoring highest on the HADS having the greatest reductions. There was no correlation between anxiety or depression and completion of PR. Responders and nonresponders did not differ in their anxiety or depression levels |
| Bratås et al | Prospective cohort study | n=111 stage I–IV COPD patients measured at baseline, 4 weeks and 6-month follow up | Evaluate the short- and long-term effects of a 4-week inpatient PRP | HADS, SGRQ | SGRQ scores and depression improved between baseline and program completion. After 6 months follow up, all SGRQ and HADS scores deteriorated. No significant differences between baseline and the end of follow up were found, except for worsening HADS anxiety score |
| Von Leupoldt et al | Prospective observational study | n=238 COPD patients with mean FEV1% predicted =54 | 3-week outpatient PR program was performed 6 h/d for 5 d/wk | 6MWD, 6MWT, HADS, SF-36 | PR was significantly associated with improvements in 6MWD, dyspnea after the 6MWT and during activities, and increased physical and mental QoL, as well as reduced anxiety and depression |
| Pirraglia et al | Prospective observational study | n=81 COPD patients with mean FEV1 1.23±0.39 L | PRP twice weekly for 8 weeks | BDI, BAI, CRQ-SR | The CRQ-SR and BDI scores improved significantly. Improvement in depressive symptoms was associated with improvement in fatigue, emotion and mastery |
| Bratås et al | Prospective observational study | n=136 patients with mild-to- severe COPD | Inpatient PRP for 7.5 hours a day, 5 d/wk for 4 weeks | HADS, SGRQ, 6MWD, TDI | A PRP improves HRQL and exercise capacity and reduces depression in COPD patients. Patients with mild or moderate disease are more likely to achieve an improved HRQoL after rehabilitation than patients with severe or very severe disease |
| Spencer et al | RCT | n=59 patients with moderate COPD completed an 8-week PRP | Supervised, outpatient- based exercise plus unsupervised home exercise vs standard care of unsupervised home exercise training following an 8-week PRP | HADS, 6MWD, SGRQ | 12 months following pulmonary rehabilitation both weekly, supervised, outpatient-based exercise plus unsupervised home exercise and standard care of unsupervised home exercise successfully maintained 6MWD, SGRQ scores in subjects with moderate COPD. No significant change from baseline to 12 months for HADS scores |
| Ozdemir et al | RCT | n=50 male patients with COPD stage II and III | 4-week water-based PRP for 35 minutes, three times a week (totally 12 sessions) vs only medical therapy | HADS, 6MWD, CRDQ | Water-based exercises are effective in improving QoL and anxiety level in COPD patients |
| Godoy et al | Prospective observational study | n=30 patients with severe and extremely severe COPD | 12-week PRP, which included 24 physical exercise sessions, 24 respiratory rehabilitation sessions, 12 psychotherapy sessions and 3 educational sessions | BAI, BDI, SGRQ, 6MWT | Pre-PRP and post-PRP values revealed a significant decrease in the levels of anxiety and depression, as well as significant improvements in the distance covered on the 6MWT and the QoL index. The benefits provided by the PRP persisted throughout the 24-month study period |
| Elçi et al | RTC | n=78 inpatients with severe COPD | PRP (24 sessions, 90 minutes duration) vs standard medical care | HADS, SF-36, SGRQ, 6MWD | Significant differences were observed in the 6MWD measurements at the third month, as well as in the SF-36 QoL scale, SGRQ and HADS measurements at the second and third months, irrespective of FEV1 |
| Paz-Díaz et al | RCT | n=24 patients with severe COPD | 8-week PR program, 3 times a week for 8 weeks | BDI, STAI, MMRC, SGRQ | After PR, there was a significant improvement in the severity of depression, a decrease in symptoms, an increase in daily living activities, and a decrease in the total score of the SGRQ. Dyspnea measured by the MRC scale was significantly better in the PR group |
| Güell et al | RCT | n=40 patients with severe COPD FEV1, 35%±13%, | 16 weeks of PR that included breathing retraining and exercise | MBHI, SCL-90-R, 6MWD, CRQ | PR may decrease psychosocial morbidity in COPD patients even when no specific psychological intervention is performed. Findings from this study also confirm the positive impact of PR on functional exercise capacity and HRQoL |
| Alexopoulos et al | Prospective observational study | n=63 patients with COPD and major depression recruited from a pulmonary rehabilitation unit | Brief inpatient PRP (median length of stay was 16 days) | Hamilton Depression Scale | Approximately 51% of subjects met criteria for response and 39% met criteria for remission. History of treatment for depression was associated with limited change in depressive symptoms, whereas social support and satisfaction with treatment were predictors of improvement. Improvement of depression may be the result of behavioral interventions rather than the use of antidepressant drugs |
| Kayahan et al | RCT | 2 months PR program, for 3 days and 2 1/2 hours weekly | HAM-A, HAM-D | There was a significant decrease in HAM-A scores in the rehabilitation group. On the contrary the HAM-A scores did not change in control group. The decrease in HAM-A scores in rehabilitation group was also statistically significant compared with the control group. There was no significant difference in HAM-D scores within the two groups and also there was no significant difference between the two groups in HAM-D scores. The health status, exercise tolerance and dyspnea intensity improved significantly in the rehabilitation group compared to the control group | |
| Arnardóttir et al | RCT | n=60 patients with COPD stage II and III | PR program twice weekly (90-minute duration) for 16 weeks after randomization to interval – 3-minute intervals ( | HADS, SF-36, CRDQ, 12 MWD | Interval training and continuous training were equally potent in improving peak exercise capacity, functional exercise capacity, dyspnea, mental health and HRQoL in patients with moderate or severe COPD |
| Goldberg et al | Prospective observational study | n=45 patients with COPD stage III | 3 weeks of inpatient PRP | BDI, Hamilton Anxiety Scale, Goldberg Scale, and Modified Borg Scale | The program significantly reduced anxiety and depression, and increased positive psychological outlook in severe pulmonary disease. Perceived breathlessness on the Borg Scale was significantly reduced |
| Trappenburg et al | Prospective observational study | n=81 patients with COPD stage II–IV, FEV1: 40%±16% | 3 months PR program (2 hours sessions, 3 times per week) | HADS, CRDQ, PFSDQ-M, 6MWT | The effects of rehabilitation are not affected by baseline psychosocial factors. Patients with less favorable psychologic or sociodemographic conditions can also benefit from pulmonary rehabilitation |
| Garuti et al | Prospective observational study | n=149 COPD patients, stage II–III, after an exacerbation | Inpatient PRP twelve 3-hours daily sessions | HADS, SGRQ, 6MWD | Inpatient pulmonary rehabilitation may improve levels of anxiety and depression as well as symptoms, exercise capacity and HRQoL in moderate-to-severe COPD patients after an acute exacerbation |
| Cilione et al | Prospective observational study | n=132 COPD patients stage II and III recovering from an acute exacerbation | Inpatient PR program: 12 sessions (6 d/wk), lasted for 3 hours daily | HADS, SGRQ, 6MWD | 6MWD increased by 34%, HAD-anxiety decreased by 16%, HAD-depression decreased by 13% and SGRQ decreased by 11% |
| White et al | RCT | n=103 COPD patients stage III, n1=44, n2=49 | n1: PRP twice a week for a 2-hour session for 6 weeks vs n2: brief advice | HADS, SF-36, CRQ, shuttle walking distance | At 3 months both groups reported reduced anxiety on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and dimensions of QoL, but differences between groups were not significant. Shuttle walking distance increased significantly in the intervention group compared to controls |
| Withers et al | Prospective observational study | n=99 COPD patients stage III (35 had significant anxiety at screening and 18 significant depression) | 3 months PR program | HADS, shuttle walk distance | PR produced statistically significant falls in mean HADS scores, which remained significantly lowered at 6-month follow up. Patients with high anxiety levels showed significantly greater improvements in shuttle walk distance than those with low HAD scores |
| Emery et al | RTC | n=79 COPD outpatients stage II–III, EXESM =29, ESM =25, WL =25 | EXESM: 10-week PR with exercise, education, and stress management ESM: education and stress management; and WL: wait list control | CES-D, SCL-90-R, STAI, SIP and Physiologic Measures | Intervention participants in the PRP group, compared to the other 2 groups, reported improved endurance, reduced anxiety, and improved cognitive performance |
| Ries et al | RTC | n=119 stable COPD outpatients stage I–III, n1=57, n2=62 | n1:8-week PR program (twelve 4-hour sessions) vs n2: an 8-week education program (four 2-hour sessions biweekly for 8 weeks) | CES-D, Quality of Well- Being Scale and Physiologic Measures | Measures of lung function, depression, and general QoL, did not differ between groups. Differences tended to diminish after 1 year of follow-up |
| Emery et al | Prospective observational study | 64 PR patients with COPD FEV1/FVC <0.7 | PRP for 4 hours a day, 5 d/wk for 30 days | SCL-90-R, PGWI, neuropsychological assessment | Enhanced cognitive functioning and psychological well-being |
| Dekhuijzen et al | RTC | n=60 COPD outpatients stage II–III, with anxiety, depression. 3 groups of 20 patients: PR 2, TF-IMT and PR + TF-IMT | PR and PR + TF-IMT: 10-week PR program (5 d/wk for 2 hours) vs TF-IMT | SCL-90, DPI, 12 MWD, ADL | PR with or without additional TF-IMT resulted in a decrease of anxiety and depression, but there were no significant differences between the two patient groups. In the PR group, these scores were still decreased after a 1-year follow-up period. TF-IMT alone had no effects on the psychological parameters |
| Coventry and Hind | Review and meta- analysis: 6 RCTs | n=269 clinically stable moderate-to-severe COPD patients | Comparing PRP ≥4 weeks with up to 3 sessions/wk vs standard care (with or without education) | Standardized measures of depression and/or anxiety and generic or disease-specific HRQoL measures | PRP was significantly more effective than standard care in reducing short-term anxiety and depression. Long-term follow up data showed that gains in both psychological health status and HRQoL were not sustained at 12 months |
| Coventry et al | Review and meta- analysis: 30 RCTs | n=2,063 COPD patients stage II–III | Multicomponent exercise training vs relaxation techniques vs CBT vs self-management education | Standardized measures of depression and/or anxiety | Multicomponent exercise training effectively reduces symptoms of anxiety and depression in all people with COPD regardless of severity of depression or anxiety, highlighting the importance of promoting physical activity in this population |
| Wiles et al | Review: 12 RCTs | n=738 COPD patients stage II–III | Exercise and psychological components vs control conditions or active comparators | Standardized measures of depression and/or anxiety, QoL, dyspnea, functional exercise capacity | Results for depression, anxiety, QoL, dyspnea, functional exercise capacity favored interventions which included both exercise + psychological components compared with control conditions. Compared with active comparators results were inconsistent for depression and QoL |
Abbreviations: HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; ISWT, incremental shuttle walk test; HAM-D, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; HAM-A, Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale; BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; STAI, State Trait Anxiety Inventory; MMRC, Modified Medical Research Council Scale; CRQ-SR, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire – Self reported; CRDQ, Chronic Obstructive Disease Questionnaire; SCL-90-R, Hopkins Symptoms Checklist Revised; DASS, Depression Anxiety and Stress Scales; CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; PGWI, Psychological General Well-being Index; QoL, quality of life; SF-36, 36-Item Short Form Health Survey; 6MWT, 6-minutes walking test; MBHI, Millon Behavior Health Inventory; 12 MWD, 12 minutes walking distance; SGRQ, St Georges Respiratory Questionnaire; SIP, Sickness Impact Profile; TDI, Transitional Dyspnea Index; MHLC, Multidimensional Health Locus of Control inventory; 6MST, 6-minute stepper test; TUG, Timed Up and Go; VSRQ, Visual Simplified Respiratory Questionnaire; MCID, minimal clinically important difference; PFSDQ-M, Modified Pulmonary Functional Status and Dyspnea Questionnaire; MRC, Medical Research Council; ADL, Activities-in-Daily-Life; DPI, Dutch Personality Inventory; PR, pulmonary rehabilitation; TF-IMT, target-flow inspiratory muscle training; I, intervention group; C, control group; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; FVC, forced vital capacity; HRQoL, health-related QoL; CAT, COPD assessment test; HAD-D, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – Depression subscale; HAD-A, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale – Anxiety subscale.
Figure 1Recommendations for appropriate interventions following assessment of mental health symptoms in patients with COPD.