Literature DB >> 27852718

High-intensity interval training versus moderate-intensity steady-state training in UK cardiac rehabilitation programmes (HIIT or MISS UK): study protocol for a multicentre randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation.

Gordon McGregor1,2, Simon Nichols3, Thomas Hamborg4, Lucy Bryning5, Rhiannon Tudor-Edwards5, David Markland6, Jenny Mercer2, Stefan Birkett3, Stuart Ennis1,2, Richard Powell1, Brian Begg2,7, Mark J Haykowsky8, Prithwish Banerjee1,9, Lee Ingle3, Rob Shave2, Karianne Backx2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Current international guidelines for cardiac rehabilitation (CR) advocate moderate-intensity exercise training (MISS, moderate-intensity steady state). This recommendation predates significant advances in medical therapy for coronary heart disease (CHD) and may not be the most appropriate strategy for the 'modern' patient with CHD. High-intensity interval training (HIIT) appears to be a safe and effective alternative, resulting in greater improvements in peak oxygen uptake (VO2 peak). To date, HIIT trials have predominantly been proof-of-concept studies in the laboratory setting and conducted outside the UK. The purpose of this multicentre randomised controlled trial is to compare the effects of HIIT and MISS training in patients with CHD attending UK CR programmes. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: This pragmatic study will randomly allocate 510 patients with CHD to 8 weeks of twice weekly HIIT or MISS training at 3 centres in the UK. HIIT will consist of 10 high-intensity (85-90% peak power output (PPO)) and 10 low-intensity (20-25% PPO) intervals, each lasting 1 min. MISS training will follow usual care recommendations, adhering to currently accepted UK guidelines (ie, >20 min continuous exercise at 40-70% heart rate reserve). Outcome measures will be assessed at baseline, 8 weeks and 12 months. The primary outcome for the trial will be change in VO2 peak as determined by maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Secondary measures will assess physiological, psychosocial and economic outcomes. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: The study protocol V.1.0, dated 1 February 2016, was approved by the NHS Health Research Authority, East Midlands-Leicester South Research Ethics Committee (16/EM/0079). Recruitment will start in August 2016 and will be completed in June 2018. Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals, presented at national and international scientific meetings and are expected to inform future national guidelines for exercise training in UK CR. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT02784873; pre-results. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.

Entities:  

Keywords:  HEALTH ECONOMICS

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27852718      PMCID: PMC5129054          DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012843

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ Open        ISSN: 2044-6055            Impact factor:   2.692


To ensure the findings are applicable to the ‘real world’, this study will adopt a pragmatic, multicentre approach to assessing the efficacy of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) in UK cardiac rehabilitation (CR) programmes. This study will conduct an holistic, multidisciplinary investigation into the physiological, psychosocial and economic value of HIIT in patients with CHD. As a limitation, participants will only attend supervised exercise twice weekly for 8 weeks. This is suboptimal in relation to published data recommending three times per week for 12 weeks.

Introduction

Coronary heart disease (CHD) accounts for one-third of all deaths globally, totalling 7.4 million in 2013.1 In the UK alone, ∼175 000 myocardial infarctions (MI) are recorded annually.2 While this is a significant number, advances in preventative therapy and medical treatment have contributed to an overall reduction in CHD mortality in the UK.3 An estimated 2.3 million people are now living with the disease,2 and with a growing population of CHD survivors, the need for comprehensive and cost-effective chronic disease management is ever more apparent. Integral to the long-term management of CHD is the provision of cardiovascular rehabilitation (CR) programmes.4 5 Exercise training is considered a key component alongside risk factor management and facilitation of long-term behavioural change.4 Compelling evidence exists for CR programmes, with meta-analyses historically highlighting a favourable effect on functional capacity, health-related quality of life (HR-QoL), hospital admissions and mortality.6–8 The most recent data, however, do not confirm a survival benefit from participation in CR.9 This may relate to the ability of contemporary medical care, interventional cardiology and secondary prevention pharmacotherapy, to achieve much of what was previously attributed to CR. However, CR does improve HR-QoL and, as such, strategies to maximise long-term physical functioning (ie, optimised, personalised exercise training programmes) should be pursued in patients with CHD. Tangible benefits are realistic for the individual and an overburdened healthcare system, and CR programmes have a vital role to play in this regard. In addition to improved medical care, the prescribed intensity of the exercise training interventions included in the recent meta-analysis by Anderson et al9 may help explain the lack of improvement in mortality rates with CR. Exercise intensity ranged from 50% to 95% of peak oxygen uptake (VO2 peak), with the vast majority of protocols at the lower end of this range, that is, equivalent to moderate-intensity exercise (∼46–64% VO2 peak).10 This is in line with current international exercise guidelines for CHD which advocate moderate-intensity training (<80% VO2 peak) prescribed as either interval or steady state (MISS, moderate-intensity steady state).10 It is well known that greater improvements in VO2 peak can be expected with exercise training of a higher intensity and that a higher VO2 peak is associated with an improvement in mortality risk.11 12 Given that current guidelines predate significant advances in interventional cardiology and medical therapy, moderate-intensity exercise may be considered conservative and suboptimal for the ‘modern’ patient with CHD.13 Greater benefit may be attained by participating in high-intensity interval training (HIIT) involving repeated bursts of harder exercise interspersed with periods of recovery.14 15 High intensity, in this context, describes exercise performed above moderate intensity (ie, >64% VO2 peak) as opposed to the maximal or supramaximal exercise specified in some protocols in healthy individuals.16 Meta-analyses have indicated the superiority (∼1.7 mL/kg/min) of HIIT over MISS for improvements in VO2 peak in patients with CHD.14 15 17 These analyses, however, are limited by small sample sizes and the significant heterogeneity of study populations and HIIT protocols. HIIT protocols can be modified in numerous ways (eg, modality, intensity, interval duration) to suit the population or intended outcome,18 but there is no consensus as to the optimal configuration for the CHD population.17 In a landmark European study, high-intensity intervals lasting 4 min were deemed unfeasible in patients with CHD and offered no additional benefit over continuous training.19 As an alternative, low-volume HIIT uses 1 min intervals to provide intermittent metabolic stimulus with non-sustained cardiovascular stress. This appears to be safe and well tolerated in addition to being effective at improving VO2 peak in patients with CHD.20 21 The benefit of this ‘low-volume HIIT’ approach in ‘real world’ CR programmes in the UK, however, cannot be confirmed. Previous studies have generally been proof-of-concept studies conducted under ‘laboratory’ conditions. Carefully selected populations, tightly controlled exercise protocols and researcher-led interventions may limit the ecological validity of such studies. Likewise, substantial international variation in the provision and implementation of exercise-based CR may reduce the extent to which non-UK data can be applied to CR programmes in the UK. The high-intensity interval training versus moderate-intensity steady-state training in UK Cardiac Rehabilitation trial (HIIT or MISS UK) is a pragmatic multicentre randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation comparing two CR exercise interventions. The primary objectives of the trial are: To assess the effect of HIIT on VO2 peak and cardiovascular health. To assess the acceptability of HIIT and the psychological and motivational factors associated with compliance and adherence. To assess the effect of HIIT on lifestyle physical activity and a HR-QoL. To conduct an economic evaluation of HIIT compared with MISS in CR programmes in the UK. To assess the safety of HIIT. In patients attending CR programmes in the UK, we hypothesise that HIIT will improve VO2 peak to a greater extent than MISS training. In this population, data relating to the effects of HIIT (particularly low-volume HIIT) on clinical, physiological, psychosocial and economic outcomes are limited but appear to indicate at least an equivalent effect.22–24 As such, we also hypothesise that HIIT will (1) be more acceptable than MISS and demonstrate greater patient compliance and adherence; (2) improve cardiovascular health to a greater extent than MISS; (3) improve HR-QoL to a greater extent than MISS; (4) lead to more positive motivation and attitudes to exercise than MISS; (5) increase short-term and medium-term participation in lifestyle physical activity to a greater extent than MISS; (6) be a cost-effective alternative to MISS and (7) be as safe as MISS.

Methods and analysis

The HIIT or MISS UK study is a pragmatic, single-blind, multicentre, longitudinal, randomised controlled trial and economic evaluation. In line with the median UK CR programme duration of 8.5 weeks,25 participants will be randomly allocated to 8 weeks of HIIT or MISS training (usual care). Outcomes will be measured at baseline, 8 weeks and 12 months by assessors blinded to group allocation. Study interventions will be delivered by clinical (not research) staff. The study is pragmatic in nature in that it will be conducted in existing CR programmes. It is, therefore, accepted that some variation in the delivery of usual care will be evident between study sites. This will ensure generalisability of the findings to UK CR programmes. The trial protocol adheres to the Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Clinical Trials (SPIRIT) guidelines.26

Setting

The HIIT or MISS study will be conducted at three community CR centres; (1) Atrium Health, Centre for Exercise & Health, Coventry, (2) Department of Sport, Health & Exercise Science, University of Hull and Hull Royal Infirmary, Kingston-upon-Hull and (3) Ystrad Fawr Hospital, Ystrad Mynach, South Wales. Programmes are commissioned by University Hospitals Coventry & Warwickshire NHS Trust, City Healthcare Partnership CIC (Hull) and Aneurin Bevan University Health Board (South Wales), respectively. Starting August 2016, 510 CR patients will be recruited over a 2-year period.

Participants

The study will recruit patients with established coronary artery disease (CAD) referred for CR exercise training. Patients with MI, coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery, angiographically documented CAD and elective percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) will be eligible. Successfully revascularised following PCI or CABG. Angiographically documented non-obstructive CAD. Left ventricular ejection fraction >40%. Clinically stable (symptoms and medication) for >2 weeks. 18–75-year of age. Symptoms of ischaemia. Significant left main stem stenosis. NYHA class III–IV symptoms. Compromising ventricular arrhythmia. Significant valvular heart disease. Inability to comply with guidelines for participation in exercise testing and training.27–29 Significant limiting comorbidities that would prevent full participation.

Additional exclusion criteria

Further to the analysis of cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) and resting echocardiography by the research team at baseline, and prior to randomisation, patients will be prevented from continuing their involvement in the study if there is indication of: Exercise-induced ischaemia or significant haemodynamic compromise. Left ventricular ejection fraction <40%. Clinical instability in accordance with CR guidelines.27 29 Inability to comply with guidelines for participation in exercise testing and training.28 29

Study procedures

An outline of the participant pathway for the study is presented in figure 1. Eligibility will be assessed by the research team at each site under the supervision of the local principal investigator (PI). Potential participants will be approached at their first outpatient CR appointment by a member of the study team: verbal and written information will be provided. A subsequent phone call (at least 48 hours later) will confirm those who wish to participate. Informed consent will be attained at the baseline assessment visit, which will coincide with an outpatient CR appointment. Baseline procedures will include CPET, echocardiogram, venipuncture, arterial oscillometry and clinical examination. Instruments to assess HR-QoL, health and social care use and the psychological and motivational factors associated with compliance and adherence will be administered, and a lifestyle physical activity monitor will be fitted (removed 1 week later). Further to the analysis of CPET and echocardiography at baseline, the local research team will rescreen potential participants for eligibility. Those who are ineligible will take no further part in the study but will continue with usual care CR. Eligible participants will subsequently be randomised to 8 weeks of twice weekly HIIT or MISS training. All measures completed at baseline will be repeated at 8 weeks and 12 months.
Figure 1

Study flow chart.

Study flow chart.

Interventions

The study will compare HIIT with current usual care in the UK—that is, moderate-intensity interval training progressing towards moderate-intensity steady-state (MISS) training.29 Table 1 provides a summary of both interventions, and table 2 details the framework within which the HIIT intervention will be progressed. Participants will attend twice weekly CR exercise sessions for 8 weeks, performing either HIIT or MISS training for the cardiovascular component of their programme. In accordance with current UK standards,29 a muscular strength and endurance training programme will also be completed by both study groups, and participation in additional home-based exercise recommended as standard. Participants who are unable/unwilling to comply with the HIIT protocol will be permitted to cease involvement in the HIIT intervention and continue with usual care CR (not as part of the trial). Where two or more consecutive training sessions are missed, the intervention period can be extended to 10 weeks. As is commonplace for CR programmes in the UK, there will be some variation in the structure and delivery of the MISS intervention at each of the study sites. This is in keeping with the pragmatic nature of the trial. Each centre will, however, adhere to current UK standards.29
Table 1

Comparison of HIIT and MISS training interventions

HIITMISS

Exercise sessions conducted as follows:

Warm up: 15 min total, 10 min <40% HRR, 5 min <70% HRR.

Cardiovascular component: exercise cycle ergometer interval training (Wattbike Trainer; Wattbike, Nottingham, UK):

high=85–90% PPO from CPET, low=20–25% PPO (exercise intensity will not to be prescribed from gas exchange data, ie, %VO2 peak). Change in intensity from low to high achieved by altering cadence (rpm). Exercise HR will not exceed HRmax from CPET.

Cool down: 10 min, <40% HRR.

Duration of intervals and total programme duration increased within a standardised framework (table 2).

Workload increased bi-weekly in response to participant reported RPE (only after the full 10×1 protocol has been achieved). If RPE <17 during the last two high-intensity intervals, then workload will be increased.

Exercise sessions conducted in accordance with BACPR/ACPICR standards,29 adhering to the following key principles:

Warm up: 15 min, <40% HRR.

Cardiovascular component: moderate-intensity interval training progressing towards 20–40 min continuous cardiovascular exercise at 40–70% HRR (from CPET) and RPE 12–14.

Cool down: 10 min, <40% HRR.

Initial duration based on participant's previous and current PA levels and CPET performance.

Duration and workload of cardiovascular component adjusted, as tolerated, within the above parameters, in response to exercising HR, participant reported RPE and symptoms. As per current practice, priority will be given to increasing duration until 20 min of continuous exercise has been achieved. Thereafter, workload can be increased in conjunction with duration.

CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise test; HIIT, high-intensity interval training; HR, heart rate; HRR, heart rate reserve; MISS, moderate-intensity steady state; PA, physical activity; PPO, peak power output; RPE, rating of perceived exertion; VO2 peak, peak oxygen uptake.

Table 2

Breakdown of HIIT training programme by week

WeekHigh-intensity intervals (number×time in min)Low-intensity intervals (number×time in min)Total high-intensity exercise (min)Total low-intensity exercise (min)Total exercise time (min)
15×0.55×12.557.5
25×15×15510
37×17×17714
4–810×110×1101020

HIIT, high-intensity interval training.

Comparison of HIIT and MISS training interventions Exercise sessions conducted as follows: Warm up: 15 min total, 10 min <40% HRR, 5 min <70% HRR. Cardiovascular component: exercise cycle ergometer interval training (Wattbike Trainer; Wattbike, Nottingham, UK): high=85–90% PPO from CPET, low=20–25% PPO (exercise intensity will not to be prescribed from gas exchange data, ie, %VO2 peak). Change in intensity from low to high achieved by altering cadence (rpm). Exercise HR will not exceed HRmax from CPET. Cool down: 10 min, <40% HRR. Duration of intervals and total programme duration increased within a standardised framework (table 2). Workload increased bi-weekly in response to participant reported RPE (only after the full 10×1 protocol has been achieved). If RPE <17 during the last two high-intensity intervals, then workload will be increased. Exercise sessions conducted in accordance with BACPR/ACPICR standards,29 adhering to the following key principles: Warm up: 15 min, <40% HRR. Cardiovascular component: moderate-intensity interval training progressing towards 20–40 min continuous cardiovascular exercise at 40–70% HRR (from CPET) and RPE 12–14. Cool down: 10 min, <40% HRR. Initial duration based on participant's previous and current PA levels and CPET performance. Duration and workload of cardiovascular component adjusted, as tolerated, within the above parameters, in response to exercising HR, participant reported RPE and symptoms. As per current practice, priority will be given to increasing duration until 20 min of continuous exercise has been achieved. Thereafter, workload can be increased in conjunction with duration. CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise test; HIIT, high-intensity interval training; HR, heart rate; HRR, heart rate reserve; MISS, moderate-intensity steady state; PA, physical activity; PPO, peak power output; RPE, rating of perceived exertion; VO2 peak, peak oxygen uptake. Breakdown of HIIT training programme by week HIIT, high-intensity interval training. The following exercise training criteria must be satisfied for participants to be regarded as having sufficiently adhered to the treatment protocol: A minimum of 80% of sessions completed (13 of 16). HIIT—10×1 min protocol achieved by week 4. MISS—20 min continuous CV exercise achieved by week 4. The number of participants who do not meet the above criteria will be recorded.

Randomisation and blinding

Trial participants will be randomised to HIIT or MISS on a 1:1 basis. The random allocation sequence will be generated by the trial statistician using a random number generator and implemented by a central telephone registration and randomisation service at Warwick Clinical Trials Unit. Randomisation will be stratified by site using random permuted blocks randomisation within each site to ensure approximately equal numbers of patients are allocated to HIIT and MISS. To ensure allocation concealment, researchers will request randomisation on completion of all baseline assessments. Outcome assessors will be blinded to group allocation, as will the trial statistician. Clinical staff delivering the interventions cannot be blinded, however, they will not be involved in data analysis or reporting.

Study outcome measures

The primary outcome measure is the change in peak oxygen uptake (VO2 peak) at 8 weeks. A number of secondary outcome measures will also be assessed, namely (1) acceptability and the motivational and attitudinal factors associated with compliance and adherence; (2) HR-QoL; (3) service and resource use; (4) lifestyle physical activity; (5) cardiovascular reserve; (6) cardiac remodelling; (7) arterial remodelling; (8) cardiovascular health and (9) safety. Table 3 provides the complete schedule for outcome assessment.
Table 3

Outcome measures and assessment schedule

MeasureInstrumentAssessment time point
Primary outcome
 VO2 peakCPETBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Secondary outcomes
 Compliance, adherenceCompliance/adherence/drop-out ratesContinuous
MSESBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
BREQ-2Baseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
PNSESBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Bipolar adjectival rating scaleBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
SC-IATBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
AcceptabilitySemistructured interviews8 weeks
HR-QOLEQ-5DBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Service and resource useCSRIBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Lifestyle physical activityPhysical activity monitorBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Cardiovascular reserveCPETBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Cardiac remodellingEchocardiographyBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Arterial remodellingArterial oscillometryBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Cardiovascular healthClinical examinationBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
Blood samplingBaseline, 8 weeks, 12 months
SafetyAdverse event monitoringContinuous

BREQ-2, Behavioural Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire-2; CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise test; CSRI, client service receipt inventory; EQ-5D, 5 item EuroQol; HR-QoL, health-related quality of life; MSES, Multidimensional Self-Efficacy for Exercise Scale; PNSES, Psychological Need Satisfaction in Exercise Scale; SC-IAT, Single-Category Implicit Association Test; VO2 peak, peak oxygen uptake.

Outcome measures and assessment schedule BREQ-2, Behavioural Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire-2; CPET, cardiopulmonary exercise test; CSRI, client service receipt inventory; EQ-5D, 5 item EuroQol; HR-QoL, health-related quality of life; MSES, Multidimensional Self-Efficacy for Exercise Scale; PNSES, Psychological Need Satisfaction in Exercise Scale; SC-IAT, Single-Category Implicit Association Test; VO2 peak, peak oxygen uptake. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing will be performed to measure VO2 peak and other parameters representative of cardiovascular reserve. Tests will be conducted using a standard bicycle ramp protocol in accordance with American Thoracic Society guideline.30 Participants will be encouraged to maintain a cadence of 70 rpm until symptom-limited volitional fatigue prevents continuation. Criteria for the assessment of a good participant effort will include peak respiratory exchange ratio (RER) >1.10, peak HR≥85% predicted and RPE ≥18.31 Compliance and adherence will be determined by recording the number of training sessions attended and successfully completed in accordance with the exercise protocol. Drop-out from the programme will also be documented for both study groups in addition to reason for drop-out, where provided voluntarily by participants. To assess the psychological and motivational factors associated with compliance and adherence to the exercise training interventions, the predictive effects of self-efficacy, motivation, need satisfaction and implicit and explicit attitudes and, reciprocally, the effects of training on self-efficacy, motivation, need satisfaction and implicit and explicit attitudes, will be quantitatively measured using validated tools: (1) the Multidimensional Self-Efficacy for Exercise Scale (MSES);32 (2) the Behavioural Regulation in Exercise Questionnaire-2 (BREQ-2);33 (3) the Psychological Need Satisfaction in Exercise Scale (PNSES);32 (4) Courneya and Bobick's 7-point Bipolar Adjectival Rating Scale34 and (5) a Single-Category Implicit Association Test (SC-IAT).35 Semistructured interviews will qualitatively evaluate acceptability in a subgroup of 40 patients, representative of completers and drop-outs in both intervention groups. Verbatim transcripts will be thematically analysed.36 Health-related quality of life will be assessed with the five-item EuroQoL (EQ-5D-5L),37 as recommended by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence in the UK for economic evaluation in clinical trials.38 General population preference-based tariffs for the UK allow for the comparison of EQ-5D index scores with population norms and other health conditions.39 An adapted client service receipt inventory (CSRI), based on examples in the DIRUM database,40 will be administered at each time point to capture participant health and social care service use since the last time point (plus a retrospective 2-month period at baseline). Lifestyle physical activity will be recorded over a 7-day period with an ActiGraph GT9X Link (Actigraph, Pensacola, Florida, USA) worn on the wrist. Comprehensive evaluation of participants' daily physical activity patterns will be derived from the unit's 3-axis accelerometer, magnetometer and gyroscope. The Actigraph GT9X Link is considered the gold standard in non-invasive research grade physical activity monitoring and has been extensively validated. To quantify cardiac remodelling, echocardiographic images will be obtained and analysed as recommended in current guidelines.41 42 To assess cardiac structure and function (systolic and diastolic), standard techniques will be used including 2D, M-mode, pulse wave Doppler and tissue Doppler echocardiography. To investigate arterial remodelling, pulse wave velocity will be determined through the non-invasive method of brachial oscillometry (Mobil-O-Graph PWA Monitor, IEM GmbH, Stolberg, Germany). A blood pressure cuff will be placed on the participant's upper left arm and will inflate and deflate automatically. Mobil-O-Graph PWA has been validated against internationally recognised invasive and non-invasive gold standards.43 Standard clinical examination will include medical history, stature, body mass and cardiovascular risk factor assessment, that is, resting blood pressure, diabetes, family history of premature CHD and smoking status. Blood sampling will be performed to allow the measurement of biomarkers of cardiovascular and metabolic health. Routine testing will include full blood cell count, liver function, urea and electrolytes, glycaemic control and a full lipid profile. Serum and plasma will be stored for the analysis of current and emerging biochemical markers of cardiovascular and metabolic health relating to inflammation, cardiac remodelling, pro-thrombosis, endocrine function and lipids.44 45 To verify the safety of HIIT and MISS training performed in CR, adverse and serious adverse events will be carefully monitored, recorded and reported. In line with the principles of Good Clinical Practice, the nature and severity of the event, in addition to its potential association with the exercise training intervention, will be ascertained by the local PI and ratified by the trial clinician.46

Sample size

Given the pragmatic nature of the trial, a 1.5 mL/kg/min larger improvement of VO2 peak in the HIIT group compared to the MISS group is considered a clinically relevant difference. Keteyian and colleagues reported a reduction of ∼15% in all-cause mortality for each 1 mL/kg/min increase in VO2 peak in a large CR cohort with revascularised coronary disease.47 In the present study, a sample size of 191 patients in each group will be sufficient to detect this difference assuming a SD of 4.5 mL/kg/min, a power of 90% and a significance level of 5%. The assumed SD is based on observations from Conraads et al.19 This trial is similar to HIIT or MISS and reported a loss to follow-up from baseline to post-intervention of 13%. A conservative drop-out of ∼25% yields a required sample size of 510 patients (255 per group) to be randomised. Should the drop-out rate at 12 months be 50%, then the study would retain power of 76% to detect a difference of 1.5 mL/kg/min in the primary outcome at this time point using the aforementioned assumptions.

Data collection and management

Study data will be collected on a case report form by the research team at baseline, 8 weeks and 12 months. Each participant will be allocated a unique study ID number; a list of participants will be stored electronically by UHCW NHS Trust. Data will be anonymously entered into REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture),48 a secure, web-based application designed to support data capture for research studies. This will be hosted by Cardiff Metropolitan University.

Statistical analysis

The primary end point for the statistical analysis is the mean change in VO2 peak (mL/kg/min) from baseline to 8 weeks of follow-up. The primary end point will be compared between intervention arms using a general linear model with the treatment group and baseline VO2 peak fitted as covariates, and 8-week VO2 peak as the dependant variable. The linear model will be adjusted for the continuous covariate age, and the categorical covariates sex and study site. Further adjustment variables may be investigated as part of the exploratory analysis. The robustness of the primary outcome analysis will be investigated using three standard multiple imputation methods (monotone regression, fully conditional specification regression and Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC)). The secondary outcome measures will be analysed using the same covariates as the primary outcome analysis. Likewise, the differences between groups in terms of continuous secondary outcome measures will be assessed with the same statistical model as the primary outcome analysis. Differences between treatment arms for binary, unordered categorical and ordinal secondary outcome variables will be analysed using logistic regression, multinomial logistic regression and proportional odds models, respectively. The primary and secondary outcome analyses will be conducted at the conventional (two-sided) 5% level. To reduce the risk of false-positive claims, all secondary analyses will be considered to be exploratory if a non-significant result is obtained from the primary analysis and, whenever reported, the failure to achieve a significant result in the primary analysis will be declared. It is not proposed to formally adjust for multiple testing among the secondary end points as these are likely to be correlated so that standard adjustment techniques such as the Bonferroni method would be conservative. All analyses will be performed on an intention-to-treat basis. A per protocol analysis will be conducted as an exploratory analysis, as will subgroup analyses (for subgroups prespecified in the protocol) and repeated measures mixed models. All data will be summarised and reported in accordance with the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) guideline.49 No formal interim analyses are anticipated.

Economic evaluation

In line with the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidance on the economic evaluation of public health interventions,50 from a societal perspective, a cost-consequence analysis of HIIT (embedded within CR) compared with MISS training (representing usual care) will be undertaken. Within the cost-consequence analysis, there will be an embedded cost-utility analysis, using Quality Adjusted Life Years (QALYs) gained with HR-QoL weights drawn from EQ-5D-5L. This approach has been chosen because QALYs allow comparison with the value for money of other medical and public health interventions but do not capture the full range of relevant outcomes in public health prevention.50 We will use STATA V.14 to bootstrap (5000 replications) the differences in cost and outcomes, to produce a 95% CI, cost-effectiveness planes and cost-effectiveness acceptability curves, to present to healthcare policymakers and local commissioners the probability that the intervention is cost-effective at different payer thresholds. The health economics component of the study will be written up in accordance with the Consolidated Health Economic Evaluation Reporting Standards (CHEERS) statement for the reporting of published economic evaluations.51

Patient and public involvement

Patient and public involvement has been integral to protocol development. A formal consultation event was attended by a representative sample of current CR participants in August 2015. Participants were introduced to various different approaches to exercise training and asked to comment on their suitability. A range of opinions and views were recorded with the overriding sentiment being that participants would be prepared to engage in HIIT with minimal concern. Close supervision by experienced CR exercise professionals was considered essential. The only significant negative comment related to the fact that HIIT would be performed solely on an exercise bike as opposed to a range of cardiovascular exercise equipment. However, participants confirmed that they would be prepared to tolerate this in the short term. Two CR participants will sit on the trial steering group for the duration of the trial.

Dissemination and impact

Throughout the trial, media outlets (including social media) will be informed of progress, and the experiences gained will be presented at national conferences and non-academic outlets such as national governing body publications. On completion, the study results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at scientific meetings. The results will also be disseminated in newsletter form throughout the UK via national governing bodies and at local research and patient conference events. It is anticipated that the results of the study will inform future national guidelines for exercise training in UK CR.
  35 in total

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Authors:  Robert M Ross
Journal:  Am J Respir Crit Care Med       Date:  2003-05-15       Impact factor: 21.405

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Authors:  Patrick R Lawler; Kristian B Filion; Mark J Eisenberg
Journal:  Am Heart J       Date:  2011-09-03       Impact factor: 4.749

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Journal:  J Biomed Inform       Date:  2008-09-30       Impact factor: 6.317

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Authors:  Don Husereau; Michael Drummond; Stavros Petrou; Chris Carswell; David Moher; Dan Greenberg; Federico Augustovski; Andrew H Briggs; Josephine Mauskopf; Elizabeth Loder
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2013-03-25

Review 5.  High-intensity interval training in patients with coronary heart disease: Prescription models and perspectives.

Authors:  Paula A B Ribeiro; Maxime Boidin; Martin Juneau; Anil Nigam; Mathieu Gayda
Journal:  Ann Phys Rehabil Med       Date:  2016-06-23

Review 6.  High Intensity Interval versus Moderate Intensity Continuous Training in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease: A Meta-analysis of Physiological and Clinical Parameters.

Authors:  Kevin Liou; Suyen Ho; Jennifer Fildes; Sze-Yuan Ooi
Journal:  Heart Lung Circ       Date:  2015-07-22       Impact factor: 2.975

7.  Rehabilitation after myocardial infarction trial (RAMIT): multi-centre randomised controlled trial of comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation in patients following acute myocardial infarction.

Authors:  Robert R West; Dee A Jones; Andrew H Henderson
Journal:  Heart       Date:  2011-12-22       Impact factor: 5.994

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Authors:  Carol Ewing Garber; Bryan Blissmer; Michael R Deschenes; Barry A Franklin; Michael J Lamonte; I-Min Lee; David C Nieman; David P Swain
Journal:  Med Sci Sports Exerc       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 5.411

9.  SPIRIT 2013 statement: defining standard protocol items for clinical trials.

Authors:  An-Wen Chan; Jennifer M Tetzlaff; Douglas G Altman; Andreas Laupacis; Peter C Gøtzsche; Karmela Krleža-Jerić; Asbjørn Hróbjartsson; Howard Mann; Kay Dickersin; Jesse A Berlin; Caroline J Doré; Wendy R Parulekar; William S M Summerskill; Trish Groves; Kenneth F Schulz; Harold C Sox; Frank W Rockhold; Drummond Rennie; David Moher
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2013-02-05       Impact factor: 25.391

Review 10.  Exercise-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation for Coronary Heart Disease: Cochrane Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Lindsey Anderson; Neil Oldridge; David R Thompson; Ann-Dorthe Zwisler; Karen Rees; Nicole Martin; Rod S Taylor
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2016-01-05       Impact factor: 24.094

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  7 in total

1.  Benefits of a Supervised Ambulatory Outpatient Program in a Cardiovascular Rehabilitation Unit Prior to a Heart Transplant: A Case Study.

Authors:  Antoine Poty; Florent Krim; Philippe Lopes; Yves Garaud; Pierre-Marie Leprêtre
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2022-05-19

2.  High INtensity Interval Training In pATiEnts with intermittent claudication (INITIATE): protocol for a multicentre, proof-of-concept, prospective interventional study.

Authors:  Sean Pymer; Amy Harwood; Said Ibeggazene; Gordon McGregor; Chao Huang; Maureen Twiddy; Adam R Nicholls; Lee Ingle; Sean Carroll; Judith Long; Marjorie Rooms; I C Chetter
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-07-06       Impact factor: 2.692

Review 3.  Examining Clinical Practice Guidelines for Exercise and Physical Activity as Part of Rehabilitation for People with Stroke: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Gavin Church; Ali Ali; Christine Leslie Smith; Dave Broom; Karen Sage
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 3.390

4.  Comparison of the acute effects of Tai chi versus high-intensity interval training on inhibitory control in individuals with substance use disorder.

Authors:  Yanqiang Yin; Suyong Yang; Ke Xiao; Tianyuan Wang; Jiabin Wang; Wolfgang I Schöllhorn; Dong Zhu; Xiaowu Pang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2022-10-04

Review 5.  Is exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation effective? A systematic review and meta-analysis to re-examine the evidence.

Authors:  Richard Powell; Gordon McGregor; Stuart Ennis; Peter K Kimani; Martin Underwood
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2018-03-14       Impact factor: 2.692

Review 6.  An "Exercise" in Cardiac Metabolism.

Authors:  Stephen C Kolwicz
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2018-06-07

7.  High-Intensity Interval Training for Patients With Cardiovascular Disease-Is It Safe? A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Michael A Wewege; Dohee Ahn; Jennifer Yu; Kevin Liou; Andrew Keech
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2018-11-06       Impact factor: 5.501

  7 in total

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