| Literature DB >> 31858074 |
Sophie I E Liem1, Theodora P M Vliet Vlieland2, Jan W Schoones3, Jeska K de Vries-Bouwstra1.
Abstract
Given the shortcomings of previous literature reviews evaluating the effect and safety of exercise therapy in SSc, we aimed to carry out a systematic review of the literature specifically on this topic. A structured search strategy was performed in Medline (via PubMed) and other electronic databases from 1990 to 3 September 2019. Randomized controlled trials, observational designs, conference abstracts and trial registrations were included if they concerned SSc patients ≥18 years of age, exercise therapy and reported outcomes related to physical functioning. Nine articles were included. Four randomized controlled trials compared (a) hand exercises, (b) orofacial exercises, (c) aerobic exercises or (d) aerobic exercises plus resistance training with no exercise, demonstrating effects on hand function (a), maximum mouth opening (b), peak oxygen uptake (c + d) and quality of life. All five observational studies concerning hand, orofacial, aerobic and/or strengthening exercises reported improvements of hand function, mouth opening, aerobic capacity and/or muscle strength. In conclusion, the evidence on the effect and safety of exercise therapy in SSc is scanty.Entities:
Keywords: exercise; exercise therapy; review; scleroderma; systemic sclerosis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31858074 PMCID: PMC6913710 DOI: 10.1093/rap/rkz044
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rheumatol Adv Pract ISSN: 2514-1775
. 1Flow diagram of selection process
Main characteristics of included studies
| First author, year, country [reference] | Study design | Subjects | Intervention | Type of supervision | Primary outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Piga, 2014, Italy [ | RCT |
E: C: |
Strengthening and mobility hand exercises done at home using the Re.Mo.Te device; 50 min, 5 days/week for 12 weeks C: exercises using common daily-life objects | Every patient received individual 1 h training on the use of the device, along with an illustrated booklet describing the exercises. Every workout was remotely monitored by physicians through the telemonitoring interface | Hand function measured by HAQ, functional index for hand OA and the hand mobility in scleroderma test |
| Landim, 2017, Brazil [ | OD |
| Home-based self-management programme consisting of hand exercises and concise instructions about SSc | Instructions in the program | Hand pain (visual analog scale) and hand function (Cochin hand function scale) |
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| Yuen, 2011, USA [ | RCT |
E: C: |
Manual mouth-stretching and oral-augmentation exercises; 6 min, twice daily for 26 weeks C: no exercise | Patients were taught to perform manual mouth-stretching and oral augmentation exercises by a trained research coordinator. Handouts with pictures showing the exercises were given | Oral aperture |
| Pizzo, 2003, Italy [ | OD |
| Mouth-stretching exercises and oral augmentation exercises, 20 minutes, twice daily for 18 weeks | Patients were instructed by one of the investigators to perform the exercise programme | Maximal mouth opening |
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| Mitropoulos, 2018, UK [ | RCT |
E1: E2: C: |
E: 2 days/week for 12 weeks, 30 min of 30 s high-intensity-interval training followed by 30 s passive recovery. In the E1 group this was performed on an arm-crank ergometer and in the E2 group on a cycle ergometer C: no exercise | Supervised sessions at sport venues of the hospital |
VO2peak EQ-5D-5-L 6 min walking test |
| Mitropoulos, 2019, UK [ | RCT |
E: C: |
E: exercise programme consisting of: (a) high-intensity interval training; and (b) resistance training (five upper body exercises in a circuit row for three circles interspersed by 2–3 min), 2 days/week for 12 weeks C: no exercise | Supervised sessions at sport venues of the hospital | VO2peak |
| Oliveira, 2009, Brazil [ | OD | E: | Aerobic exercise (30 min of treadmill walking at moderate intensity), 40 min, 2 days/week for 8 weeks | Supervised sessions | VO2peak, oxygen saturation |
| Pinto, 2011, Brazil [ | OD |
| Aerobic training (20 min of treadmill exercise at a heart rate of ∼70% of VO2peak), resistance training (30 min, four sets of 8–12 maximal repetitions for the main muscle groups), 2 days/week for 12 weeks | Supervised training | Oxygen uptake, highest exercise load for bench and leg press |
| Alexanderson, 2014, Sweden [ | Single subject experimental design |
| Aerobic exercise (ergometer cycling of maximum 30 min. Intensity increased from light exertion to 15 on a Borg scale) and muscular endurance training for shoulder and hip flexors, 30–50 min, 3 days/week for 8 weeks | Supervised by a trained physical therapist | 6 min walking test |
For these studies the primary outcomes were not defined in the text, but we chose the main outcomes based on our definition of physical functioning outcomes in the text.
C: control group; E: experimental group; OD: observational design; RCT: randomized controlled trial; VO2peak: peak oxygen consumption.
Methodological quality of the included studies
| First author, publication year [reference] | Study reporting | External validity | Internal validity, bias | Internal validity, confounding | Poweranalysis |
| Level of quality | Not applicable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Piga, 2014 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10 | 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 21, 22, 23 | 17/28 | Low | |||
| Landim, 2017 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10 | 13 | 18, 20 | 25 | 12/25 | Low | 17, 22, 23 | |
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| Yuen, 2011 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (2x), 6, 7, 9, 10 | 13 | 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 21, 23, 25, 26 | 21/28 | High | ||
| Pizzo, 2003 [ | 1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 | 16, 19, 20 | 21, 26 | 13/26 | Low | 17, 22 | ||
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| Mitropoulos, 2018 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10 | 13 | 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 21, 23, 26 | 18/28 | Low | ||
| Mitropoulos, 2019 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 10 | 13 | 16, 17, 18, 19, 20 | 21, 23, 26 | 17/28 | Low | ||
| Oliveira, 2009 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 10 | 13 | 16, 18, 19, 20 | 12/25 | Low | 17, 22, 23 | ||
| Pinto, 2011 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9, 10 | 13 | 18, 20 | 26 | 12/23 | Low | 5, 17, 22, 23 | |
| Alexanderson, 2014 [ | 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 9 | 13 | 16, 18, 19 | 26 | 12/24 | Low | 17, 22, 23, 25 | |
Only the numbers for fulfilled criteria are reported.
Quality score is the sum of positive scores. Studies are considered of high quality when their total quality score reflects at least two-thirds of answered items.
Results of exercise interventions of included studies
| First author, year, country [reference] | Primary outcomes at baseline | Adherence, % | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Piga, 2014, Italy [ |
E: HAQ: 1.49 Dreiser’s index: 13.9 HAMIS right hand: 5.2 HAMIS left hand: 4.7 C: HAQ: 1.56 Dreiser’s index: 14.0 HAMIS right hand: 4.7 HAMIS left Hand: 2.2 | 93.4 (range 71.4–98.8) | The experimental group showed significant improvements in Dreiser’s index (13.9–7.7), HAQ (1.49–0.81) and the HAMIS (right hand: 5.2–3.3; left hand: 4.7–2.2) over time, but differences between groups were not significant (change over time in control group for Dreiser’s index: 14.0–9.50; HAQ: 1.56–1.09; HAMIS right hand: 4.7–3.2; HAMIS left hand: 2.2–1.7). |
| Landim, 2017, Brazil [ |
Pain visual analog scale: 3.97 Cochin hand function scale: 19.24 | Not determinable | Significant improvements in hand pain measured by visual analog scale (3.97 |
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| Yuen, 2011, USA [ |
Oral aperture (mm) E: 27.4 C: 32.4
| 48.9 ( |
In 3 months, the experimental group showed a significantly larger change (i.e. increase) in the size of oral aperture compared with the control group (2.81 There was a significant difference in the overall change of the oral aperture size in the orofacial exercise group (2.75 mm) but not the no-exercise group (2.33 mm) |
| Pizzo, 2003, Italy [ | Maximal mouth opening (mm): 26 | 100 | The maximum mouth opening improved significantly from 26 to 36.7 mm after the intervention |
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| Mitropoulos, 2018, United Kingdom [ |
VO2peak (ml/kg/min): E1: 17.7 E2: 14.6 C: 14.3 |
E1 (arm crank): 92 E2 (cycle ergometry): 88 |
In both intervention groups, values of VO2peak were greater post-exercise intervention compared with the control group (significantly for the arm crank group). Both intervention groups reported improved quality of life |
| Mitropoulos, 2019, United Kingdom [ |
VO2peak (ml/kg/min): E: 20.6 C: 15.7 | Not determinable | VO2peak was significantly greater in the exercise group (25.6±7.2 ml/kg/min) compared with the control group after the exercise intervention |
| Oliveira, 2009, Brazil [ |
VO2peak (ml/kg/min): 19.72 Metabolic equivalent: 5.63 | 100 | Significant improvement in VO2peak (19.72 |
| Pinto, 2011, Brazil [ |
Highest exercise load of leg press: 67 kg; and bench press 47 kg VO2peak: 21.6 ml/kg/min | Not determinable | Significant improvement in muscle strength and function, time to exhaustion, heart rate at rest, and the workload and time of exercise at ventilatory thresholds and peak of exercise |
| Alexanderson, 2014, Sweden [ | 6 min walk test at baseline unknown | 98 |
No patient showed a statically significant change in physical walking distance during the 6 min walk test. Three patients significantly improved with respect to muscular endurance concerning hip and shoulder flexion. Aerobic capacity measured by treadmill test improved in one patient statistically significant and clinically significant in one patient. Reduced fatigue measured by visual analog scale in three patients. |
C = control group; E: experimental group; HAMIS: HAnd Mobility in Scleroderma; VO2peak: peak oxygen consumption.
Safety of exercise therapy
| First author, publication year [reference] | Adverse events | Dropouts/protocol violations |
|---|---|---|
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| Piga, 2014 [ | None reported |
E: one patient discontinued the exercise protocol because of major abdominal surgery and was withdrawn from the trial C: two patients reported discontinuing the protocol for >1 week for no specific reason and were withdrawn from the study |
| Landim, 2017 [ | None reported | Five patients did not return for re-evaluations and were excluded. In the flow diagram, transportation problems are given as the reason |
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| Yuen, 2011 [ | Not determinable |
E: four participants dropped out. Some of the known reasons for participant dropout included sickness, diagnosis of cancer, incarceration, and complaint of sore throat after dental cleaning C: five participants dropped out. Some of the known reasons for this included hip replacement, military service, and unable to re-schedule the final visit before termination of the study |
| Pizzo, 2003 [ | Mid-muscular fatigue at the cheek and the temporomandibular joint was reported in 10/10 and 4/10 subjects, respectively. This occurred during the exercise programme and disappeared within 30 min after finishing the exercises | No dropouts |
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| Mitropoulos, 2018 [ | None reported | One dropout for each exercise group. Reasons are not specified |
| Mitropoulos, 2019 [ | None reported | No dropouts |
| Oliveira, 2009 [ | None reported | Nine patients agreed to participate and seven completed the study. Reasons are not given |
| Pinto, 2011 [ | None reported | No dropouts |
| Alexanderson, 2014 [ | None reported | One participant missed two of in total 24 exercise sessions owing to medical investigations of increased lung symptoms |
C: control group; E: experimental group.
Overview of ongoing and upcoming projects concerning exercise therapy in SSc
| First author, country [reference] | Study design | Subjects | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Kwakkenbos, multicentre [ | RCT | 586 SSc patients with at least mild hand function limitations (Cochin hand function scale ≥3) |
E: online hand-exercise intervention, 3 months C: usual care | Cochin hand function scale |
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| Sydow, Belgium, [ | OD | SSc patients with maximal oral aperture <40 mm |
E1: exercises with jaw motion device E2: mouth-stretching exercises In both groups, patients had to exercise for 10 min, three times/day for 3 months | Mouth opening |
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| Ferrari, Italy [ | Single-blind RCT, parallel assignment | 33 SSc patients |
E: home-based exercise programme consisting of aerobic exercise on a stationary bicycle, muscle-endurance training of upper limb and stretching exercises for finger joint motion. C: encouragement to perform generic aerobic physical activity | 6 min walking test, maximum oxygen consumption, handgrip strength, one repetition maximum of biceps strength, muscular strength of lower limbs, hand mobility in scleroderma test |
C: control group; E: experimental group; OD: observational design; RCT: randomized controlled trial.