| Literature DB >> 31964402 |
Maj Siercke1,2, Lise Pyndt Jørgensen3, Malene Missel4, Lau Caspar Thygesen5, Pernille Peppercorn Blach6, Henrik Sillesen7,8, Selina Kikkenborg Berg8,9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Intermittent claudication (IC) caused by peripheral artery disease (PAD) is a common cardiovascular disease. Patients with IC have reduced walking capacity, restricted activity levels and mobility, and reduced health-related quality of life. The disease leads to social isolation, the risk of cardiovascular morbidity, and mortality. Non-operative management of IC requires exercise therapy and studies show that supervised exercise training is more effective than unsupervised training, yet many patients with IC lack motivation for changes in health behaviour. No studies investigating the effects of existing cardiac rehabilitation targeted patients with IC have been published. The aim of this article is to present the rationale and design of the CIPIC Rehab Study, which examines the effect of a cross-sectoral rehabilitation programme versus usual care for patients in non-operative management for IC. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: A randomised clinical trial aims to investigate whether cardiac rehabilitation for patients with IC in non-operative management versus usual care is superior to treatment as usual. The trial will allocate 118 patients, with a 1:1 individual randomisation to either the intervention or control group. The primary outcome is maximal walking distance measured by the standardised treadmill walking test. The secondary outcome is pain-free walking distance measured by the standardised treadmill walking test, healthy diet measured by a fat-fish-fruit-green score, and level of physical activity measured by an activity score within official recommendations. Statistical analyses will be blinded. Several exploratory analyses will be performed. A mixed-method design is used to evaluate qualitative and quantitative findings. A qualitative and a survey-based complementary study will be undertaken to investigate patients' post-discharge experiences. A qualitative post-intervention study will explore experiences of participation in rehabilitation. DISCUSSION: The study is the first to assess the effect of a cardiac rehabilitation programme designed for patients with IC. The study will describe how to monitor and improve rehabilitation programmes for patients with IC in a real-world setting. Mixed-method strategies can allow for both exploration and generalisation in the same study, but the research design is a complex intervention and any effects found cannot be awarded a specific component. TRIAL REGISTRATION: Retrospectively registered in Clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT03730623.Entities:
Keywords: Cross-sectoral rehabilitation; Intermittent claudication; Physical exercise
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31964402 PMCID: PMC6975054 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-019-4032-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
The CIPIC Rehab Study - exploratory quantities subjected to post hoc analysis
| Quantity | Time of measure | Type of quantity |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic | ||
| Sex | Baseline | Binary (M/F) |
| Age, height, weight, body mass index (BMI) | Baseline | Continuous |
| Marital, occupational, educational status | Baseline | Categorical |
| Clinical | ||
| Charlson Comorbidity Index [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Hypertension | Baseline 6, 12 | Binary (Y/N) |
| Smoking+ Fagerströms test, (Alcohol Timeline Followback) | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Medication (routine drugs; antiplatelet; statins and other medication) | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Nutritional screening ‘HjerteKost’: fat-fish-fruit-green score [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Paraclinical | ||
| Blood work (biomarkers, cholesterol, HBa1C, Hg, thyroid) | Baseline, 6, 12 | Continuous |
| Physical function | ||
| The standardised treadmill walking test [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Continuous |
| Six-minute walking test (before and after supervised exercise training) [ | Baseline, 3 | Continuous |
| Sit to stand test (before and after supervised exercise training) [ | Baseline, 3 | Continuous |
| Level of physical activity (0–7 times a week) | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Questionnaires | ||
| HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| VascuQol, Vascular Quality of Life questionnaire [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| PAM13, 13-item Patient Activation Measure [ | Baseline, 6, 12 | Categorical |
| Pedometer, text message (intervention group) | 3 months, 6 | Binary (Y/N) |
| Participation in dietician and nurse session (intervention group) | 3 months | Binary (Y/N) |
M/F male/female, Y/N yes/no
Focus group - interview topics
| Supervised exercise training: physiotherapist. Content and education | |
| Education session: nurse and dietician. Content and education | |
| Patients’ experiences of participating in the intervention group. | |
| Knowledge and uncertainty about IC | |
| Experiences of factors and barrier that supported or hindered adherence to the intervention. | |
| Factors that influence coping strategy, persistent lifestyle changes | |
| Importance of environment and togetherness with similar patients | |
| Empathy, support and motivation | |
| Risk factor management | |
| Coping behaviours | |
| Change interventions | |
| Attitudes, beliefs, how to handle the pain | |
| Feeling better mentally | |
| Accessibility and compliance | |
| Self-monitoring goal setting | |
| Exercise logbook and pedometers. Motivational text message. | |
| Specific walking advice to promote self-managed walking | |
| Quality of life | |
| Solution behaviour change techniques | |
| Patient satisfaction of participate in the IC rehabilitation programme and point out if any suggestions for changes. |
Fig. 1.Patient flow