| Literature DB >> 31404368 |
Chul Kim1, Jidong Sung2, Jong Hwa Lee3, Won-Seok Kim4,5, Goo Joo Lee6, Sungju Jee7, Il-Young Jung7, Ueon Woo Rah8, Byung Ok Kim9, Kyoung Hyo Choi10, Bum Sun Kwon11, Seung Don Yoo12, Heui Je Bang6, Hyung-Ik Shin13, Yong Wook Kim14, Heeyoune Jung15, Eung Ju Kim16, Jung Hwan Lee17, In Hyun Jung9, Jae-Seung Jung18, Jong-Young Lee19, Jae-Young Han20, Eun Young Han21, Yu Hui Won22, Woosik Han23, Sora Baek24, Kyung-Lim Joa25, Sook Joung Lee26, Ae Ryoung Kim27, So Young Lee21, Jihee Kim28, Hee Eun Choi29, Byeong-Ju Lee30, Soon Kim31.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Though clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) for cardiac rehabilitation (CR) are an effective and widely used treatment method worldwide, they are as yet not widely accepted in Korea. Given that cardiovascular disease is the second leading cause of death in Korea, it is urgent that CR programs be developed. In 2008, the Government of Korea implemented CR programs at 11 university hospitals as part of its Regional Cardio-Cerebrovascular Center Project, and 3 additional medical facilities will be added in 2019. In addition, owing to the promotion of CR nationwide and the introduction of CR insurance benefits, 40 medical institutions nationwide have begun CR programs even as a growing number of medical institutions are preparing to offer CR. The purpose of this research was to develop evidence-based CPGs to support CR implementation in Korea.Entities:
Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome; Cardiac rehabilitation; Clinical practice guidelines; Mortality; Secondary prevention
Year: 2019 PMID: 31404368 PMCID: PMC6687042 DOI: 10.5090/kjtcs.2019.52.4.248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Korean J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg ISSN: 2233-601X
Appraisal of foreign clinical practice guidelines for cardiac rehabilitation with AGREE II
| Guideline | Reviewer | Rigor of development | Rigor percentage | Total score for each domain | Overall appraisal | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland (SIGN 2107) | 1 | 50 | 83 | 130 | 6 | Selected |
| 2 | 46 | 125 | 6 | |||
| England (NICE 2013) | 3 | 50 | 89 | 121 | 6 | Partial selection |
| 4 | 56 | 135 | 6 | |||
| United States (AHA 2011) | 5 | 37 | 67 | 90 | 5 | Partial selection |
| 6 | 30 | 89 | 4 | |||
| Canada (CACR 2009) | 7 | 20 | 44 | 71 | 3 | Partial reference |
| 8 | 38 | 99 | 4 | |||
| Japan (JCS 2012) | 7 | 26 | 34 | 70 | 3 | Partial reference |
| 8 | 23 | 75 | 4 |
AGREE, Appraisal Guidelines for Research and Evaluation; SIGN, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network; NICE, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence; AHA, American Heart Association; CACR, Canadian Association of Cardiac Rehabilitation; JCS, Japanese Circulation Society.
Key questions for clinical practice guidelines for cardiac rehabilitation
| Question | Description |
|---|---|
| KQ1 | Must cardiac rehabilitation be included in the treatment of acute coronary syndrome? |
| KQ2 | Does cardiac rehabilitation influence the outcome of patients with cardiovascular disease? |
| KQ3 | Does cardiac rehabilitation improve the quality of life of patients with cardiovascular disease? |
| KQ4 | When should cardiac rehabilitation be begun? (Timing of cardiac rehabilitation) |
| KQ5 | How should cardiac rehabilitation programs be structured? |
| KQ6 | Can cardiac rehabilitation programs lower health management costs for patients with acute coronary syndrome? |
| KQ7 | Are individualized cardiac rehabilitation programs more effective than the existing fixed cardiac rehabilitation program? |
| KQ8 | Should psychological interventions concerning anxiety, depression, and stress be included in the cardiac rehabilitation program? |
| KQ9 | Is a cardiopulmonary exercise test necessary for cardiac rehabilitation? |
| KQ10 | Is a submaximal exercise test, such as a 6-minute walk test, useful for cardiac rehabilitation? |
| KQ11 | What are the effective measures for promoting participation in cardiac rehabilitation? |
| KQ12 | What are the effective measures for increasing physical activity compliance rates? |
| KQ13 | When should patients begin cardiac rehabilitation following coronary artery bypass grafting? |
| KQ14 | Should aerobic exercises be included in the cardiac rehabilitation program? |
| KQ15 | Should resistance (muscle training) exercises be included in the cardiac rehabilitation program? |
| KQ16 | How can the safety of cardiac rehabilitation exercises be enhanced? |
| KQ17 | Can a home-based cardiac rehabilitation program replace a hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation program? |
| KQ18 | Should cardiac rehabilitation programs be recommended to elderly patients? |
| KQ19 | Is patient education a necessary part of cardiac rehabilitation? |
| KQ20 | What contents should be included in patient education? |
| KQ21 | What interventions are needed to improve patients’ adherence to taking their medications? |
| KQ22 | What is an effective intervention for patients who need to stop smoking? |
| KQ23 | What diet therapies are recommended for patients undergoing cardiac rehabilitation? |
| KQ24 | Should a specific food supplement be recommended? |
| KQ25 | Would an ICT-based modality be helpful in maintaining the effects of education in the long-term? |
ICT, information & communication technology.
Levels of evidence [5]
| Levels | Evidence |
|---|---|
| 1++ | High-quality meta-analyses, systematic reviews of RCT, or RCT with a very low ROB |
| 1+ | Well-conducted meta-analyses, systematic reviews, or RCT with a low ROB |
| 1− | Meta-analyses, systematic reviews, or RCT with a high ROB |
| 2++ | High-quality systematic reviews of case-control or cohort studies |
| 2+ | Well-conducted case-control or cohort studies with a low risk of confounding or bias and a moderate probability that the relationship is causal |
| 2− | Case-control or cohort studies with a high risk of confounding or bias and a significant risk that the relationship is not causal |
| 3 | Non-analytic studies, e.g., case reports, case series |
| 4 | Expert opinion |
RCT, randomized controlled trials; ROB, risk of bias.
Recommendations and Good-Practice Points [5]
| Description | |
|---|---|
| Recommendation | Some recommendations can be made with more certainty than others. The wording used in the recommendations in this guideline denotes the certainty with which the recommendation is made (the “strength” of the recommendation). |
| The “strength” of a recommendation takes into account the quality (level) of the evidence. Although higher-quality evidence is more likely to be associated with strong recommendations than lower-quality evidence, a particular level of quality does not automatically lead to a particular strength of recommendation. | |
| Other factors that are taken into account when forming recommendations include: relevance to the NHS (National Health Service) in Scotland; applicability of published evidence to the target population; consistency of the body of evidence, and the balance of benefits and harms of the options. | |
| R: For “strong” recommendations on interventions that “should” be used, the guideline development group is confident that, for the vast majority of people, the intervention (or interventions) will do more good than harm. For “strong” recommendations on interventions that “should not” be used, the guideline development group is confident that, for the vastmajority of people, the intervention (or interventions) will do more harm than good. | |
| R: For “conditional” recommendations on interventions that should be “considered,” the guideline development group is confident that the intervention will do more good than harm for most patients. The choice of intervention is therefore more likely to vary depending on a person’s values and preferences, and so the healthcare professional should spend more time discussing the options with the patient. | |
| Good-Practice Points | √: Recommended best practice based on the clinical experience of the guideline development group. |
Key recommendations of cardiac rehabilitation
| Recommendations | Description |
|---|---|
| 1. Introduction of CR |
- CR programs must be included in the treatment of acute coronary syndrome (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) - CR exercise should be initiated as early as possible following acute phase treatment (SOR, strong; LOE, 1−) |
| 2. Assessments of CR |
- Cardiopulmonary exercise testing should be performed to assess patients’ cardiopulmonary exercise functions, prescribe exercise, and predict outcomes (SOR, strong; LOE, 2++) - Interventions to increase self-efficacy and awareness of the need for CR are needed to increase CR participation (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) - Systematized automatic referrals and liaison systems should be considered to increase CR referral rates. (SOR, GPP; LOE, 2−) |
| 3. Exercise therapy for CR |
- CR should be initiated early after surgery, as an inpatient program for patients who undergo coronary artery bypass grafting (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) - Risk assessment and appropriate monitoring based on the risk assessment results should be performed to ensure patient safety during CR exercise programs (SOR, strong; LOE, 2++) - CR programs should also be administered to patients aged 65 years and older (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) |
| 4. Education for secondary prevention |
- CR programs should include patient education (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) - Smoking cessation interventions should be provided for patients who smoke, and continuous interventions of more than four weeks should be considered (SOR, strong; LOE, 1++) - ICT-based modalities should be considered to maintain the effects of education (SOR, conditional; LOE, 1−) |
CR, cardiac rehabilitation; SOR, strength of recommendation; LOE, level of evidence; GPP, Good-Practice Point; ICT, information & communication technology.
Absolute and relative contraindications to resistance training
| Contraindications | |
|---|---|
| Absolute | Unstable coronary heart disease |
| Relative | Major risk factors for coronary heart disease |
Should consult a physician before participation.
Education contents for cardiac rehabilitation in SIGN 2017 [5]
| Education contents | |
|---|---|
| Throughout entire CR program |
- Education about the effects of cardiovascular events/coronary artery disease, such as myocardial infarction, on psychological/emotional state - To promote secondary prevention, explain the purpose and need for the prescribed medications and encourage patients to adhere to prescription - Guide patients to additionally obtain appropriate information |
| Before discharge |
- Provide information about disease and other precautions: name of diagnosis, how to respond to chest pain (including nitroglycerin sublingual tablet or spray), recommendations about appropriate daily activities and driving, return to work - Provide additional relevant educational materials - Inform about upcoming treatments, interventions, and appointments - Purpose and need for CR program. How to contact the CR team - (For smokers) Importance of smoking cessation |
| When assessing CR |
- Additional education according to patient needs: physical activity, exercise, smoking cessation, weight management, nutritional education, psychological/emotional response to disease - Needs for and benefits of maintaining exercise habits in the long-term; can perform exercise safely and effectively at the appropriate intensity. - Ways to contact the CR team when in need of advice or support |
SIGN, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network; CR, cardiac rehabilitation.
Diet program for cardiac rehabilitation program
| Item | Contents | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Diet pattern | Diversify food groups within the appropriate total energy consumption to maintain a healthy weight, including whole grains, vegetables, fruits, fish (blue-backed fish), poultry, beans, and nuts. | Major foreign guidelines prioritize a guideline for overall diet patterns. Korean guidelines do not provide instructions about diet patterns, but it would be desirable to include one, owing to the nature of the diet culture. However, considering Koreans’ food culture, we did not mention dairies (low fat). |
| Fat [ | Limit total fat intake to 30% of total energy intake. Limit saturated fat intake to 7% of total energy intake. Replace saturated fats with MUFA and PUFA, and limit omega-6 PUFA to 10% of total energy intake. Limit trans-fat intake to 1% of total energy intake. | Generally, accept the recommendations of the KSLA guideline (However, to increase the emphasis on MUFA, we revised the guideline to separately mention MUFA and PUFA). |
| Cholesterol [ | Limit daily cholesterol intake to 300 mg. | Recently, multiple foreign guidelines tend to delete a guideline for cholesterol. However, we included this, as some foreign guidelines still limit daily cholesterol intake to 200–300 mg, and the Korean nutrient standardand KSLA guideline limits daily cholesterol intake to 300 mg. |
| Salt [ | Limit daily salt intake to 5 g (daily sodium intake to 2 g) | Daily salt intake ranges from 4–6 g in foreign guidelines. To remain consistent with the Korean nutrient standard, we set daily salt intake to 5 g. |
| Fibers [ | Eat enough whole grains and vegetables to keep daily fiber intake above 25 g. | European guidelines set daily fiber intake to 30–45 g, but Canadian, American, and Korean guidelines set the cutoff to 25 g. |
| Sugars | Limit added sugar (sugars added during cooking or processing) intake to 10% of total energy intake | Most foreign major guidelines include a phrase about limiting sugar-sweetened beverages in their diet pattern guideline. Because sugar intake is on the rise recently, it is valid to include sugar intake in the guideline. As with the added sugar standard in the Korean nutrient standard, added sugars are limited to 10% of total energy intake. |
| Alcohol [ | It is desirable to avoid drinking. | In unavoidable cases, alcohol should be limited to 2 shots a day for men (20 mg) and 1 shot a day for women (10 mg). Alcohol intake should be minimized to control blood pressure and body weight. |
MUFA, monounsaturated fatty acid; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acid; KSLA, Korean Society of Lipid and Atherosclerosis.