| Literature DB >> 32537235 |
Anna T Freeman1,2,3, David Hill1,3, Colin Newell3, Helen Moyses1,3, Adnan Azim1,3,4, Deborah Knight2,3, Laura Presland3, Matthew Harvey3, Hans Michael Haitchi1,3,4,5, Alastair Watson1,2,3, Karl J Staples1,2,3, Ramesh J Kurukulaaratchy1,3,4,6, Tom M A Wilkinson1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Exercise is recommended in guidelines for asthma management and has beneficial effects on symptom control, inflammation and lung function in patients with sub-optimally controlled asthma. Despite this, physical activity levels in patients with difficult asthma are often impaired. Understanding the barriers to exercise in people with difficult asthma is crucial for increasing their activity, and in implementing successful, disease modifying, and holistic approaches to improve their health.Entities:
Keywords: Asthma; barriers; exercise; psychology
Year: 2020 PMID: 32537235 PMCID: PMC7285728 DOI: 10.1186/s40733-020-00058-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asthma Res Pract ISSN: 2054-7064
Demographic and disease related data
| Median [IQR] | Median [IQR] | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 501 | 65.3% | 62 | 69.4% | ns | ||
| Age at Study Enrolment (years) | 501 | 52 [38.5, 63.0] | 62 | 53.5 [35.75, 65.25] | ns | ||
| Age at asthma diagnosis | 479 | 19 [4, 40] | 62 | 23 [3.0, 40.35] | ns | ||
| BMI | 495 | 29.7 [25.6, 35.3] | 60 | 29.25 [25.5, 36.23] | ns | ||
| Obese | 48.3% | 62 | 48.3% | ns | |||
| Current or Ex Smokers | 47.6% | 62 | 31.1% | ns | |||
| Rhinitis | 67.5% | 62 | 58.1% | ns | |||
| Eczema | 26.1% | 62 | 25.8% | ns | |||
| Bronchiectasis | 6.9% | 62 | 16.1% | ns | |||
| GORD | 14.1% | 61 | 50% | ns | |||
| Depression | 64.8% | 62 | 17.7% | ns | |||
| Anxiety | 36.8% | 62 | 19.4% | ns | |||
| Dysfunctional Breathing | 48.7% | 61 | 41% | ns | |||
| Intermittent Laryngeal Dysfunction | 14.5% | 59 | 10.2% | ns | |||
| Sulphite Sensitivity | 7.7% | 62 | 4.8% | ns | |||
| Salicylate Sensitivity | 25.1% | 62 | 21% | ns | |||
| Sleep Apnoea | 7.2% | 62 | 6.5% | ns | |||
| ≥ 1 Asthma Related ICU Visits ever | 28.2% | 60 | 1.7% | ns | |||
| ≥ 1 Asthma Hospital Admission (last 12 months) | 29.0% | 62 | 11.3% | ||||
| ≥ 3 Rescue Oral Corticosteroids (last 12 months) | 43.6% | 60 | 31.7% | ns | |||
| Maintenance oral corticosteroids steroids | 29.9% | ||||||
| Biological treatment in last 12 months | 17.6% | 39% | |||||
| Eosinophil Count | 0.2 [0.1, 0.4] | ns | |||||
| ns | |||||||
| FeNO50 (ppb) | 329 | 19.7 [10.0, 38.7] | 62 | 22 [14, 45.5] | |||
| Post BD FEV1 (%) | 341 | 75 [59.3, 92.1] | 57 | 73.4 [59.5, 86.6] | ns | ||
| Post BD FEV1/FVC (ratio) | 340 | 68 [58, 78] | 57 | 72 [56.5, 78] | ns | ||
| Positive to any Aeroallergen | 68.0% | 52 | 75% | ns | |||
| Positive to Aspergillus | 15.8% | 47 | 17% | ns | |||
| ACQ6 Score | 467 | 2.5 [1.5, 3.5] | 62 | 2.4 [1.28, 3.2] | ns | ||
| Epworth Score | 424 | 8 [4, 12.75] | 55 | 8 [3, 11] | ns | ||
| HADS Total Score | 418 | 10.5 [6, 18] | 53 | 8 [4.0, 15.5] | ns | ||
| HADS A Score | 425 | 6 [3, 10] | 55 | 5 [3, 9] | ns | ||
| HADS D Score | 426 | 4 [2, 8] | 53 | 3 [1, 6] | |||
| Hull Cough Score | 378 | 25 [14, 36] | 48 | 30 [14.25, 41.75] | ns | ||
| Nijmegen Score | 373 | 21 [12, 31] | 47 | 21 [13, 26] | ns | ||
| SNOT22 Score | 324 | 31.5 [20, 50] | 40 | 36.5 [23.25, 48.75] | ns | ||
| EQ_5D_5L Index value | 170 | 0.72 [0.53, 0.83] | 62 | 0.72 [0.54, 1.00] | ns | ||
| SGRQ Total Score | 381 | 51.1 [35.25, 67.34] | 49 | 59.6 [37.1, 63.4] | ns | ||
| SGRQ Symptoms Score | 411 | 67.73 [50.72, 81.31] | 53 | 68 [53, 81.7] | ns | ||
| SGRQ Activity Score | 389 | 66.1 [43.7, 85.7] | 50 | 66.2 [41.8, 73.8] | ns | ||
| SGRQ Impacts Score | 396 | 38.71 [22.76, 55.74] | 52 | 36 [25.4, 54.1] | ns | ||
ETBQ question results for total cohort
| Question | Range | |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 (Pain or discomfort) | 4 | 0–10 |
| Q2 (Fatigue) | 5 | 0–10 |
| Q3 (Boredom) | 1 | 0–10 |
| Q4 (Too Difficult) | 2 | 0–9 |
| Q5 (Wastes Time) | 0 | 0–9 |
| Q6 (Reminds of Condition) | 5 | 0–10 |
| Q7 (Lacks Support) | 0 | 0–10 |
| Q8 (Lacks Motivation) | 3 | 0–10 |
| Q9 (Inappropriate) | 0 | 0–9 |
| Q10 (Not Efficient) | 0.5 | 0–10 |
Median (and min-max) results for each of the ten questions comprising the ETBQ for the total cohort are shown (n = 62)
Fig. 1Q1 (The exercise causes me pain): results for comparison using Kruskal Wallis Test to compare ETBQ scores for question 1 when grouped by BMI category (mdn and IQR), with significantly higher scores noticed in those overweight (p = 0.017)
Fig. 2Q6 (Exercising reminds me of my condition)-: Independent samples Median Test results for comparison of ETBQ scores for question 6 when grouped by age at diagnosis (mdn and IQR), with significant differences in the age 6–11 group (p = 0.03)
Fig. 3Correlation between symptom scores (ACQ6, Fig. 4a) and rescue OCS (Fig. 4b) as assessed by Spearman Rank Correlation with r and p values
Fig. 4ETBQ and psychological comorbidity for anxiety and depression (HADS total, Fig. 5a), anxiety (HADSA, Fig. 5b), depression (HADSD, Fig. 5c), as assessed by Spearman Rank Correlation with r and p values
Fig. 5ETBQ and Quality of Life Scores for SGRQ total (6A), impacts (6B) and symptoms (6C), and EQ-5D5L heath today 6D, and EQ-5D-5 L Index (6E as assessed by Spearman correlation, with r and p value