Exercise intolerance is a major burden for patients with complex congenital heart disease (CHD), significantly affecting their quality of life. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing provides a reliable tool both for assessing exercise capacity of CHD patients and for risk stratification and is becoming part of the routine clinical assessment of these patients. Exercise has an effect on the muscular, metabolic and circulatory systems. While exercise training has been widely studied in chronic heart failure, its efficacy in adults with CHD remain unknown. The investigators hypothesize that structured exercise training will improve exercise intolerance, in particular peak VO2. The aim of this multicenter, randomized study is to evaluate the impact of structured exercise training on exercise intolerance in patients with complex CHD.
This is a randomized, prospective, multicenter, interventional study. After study patients have given written consent they will be randomized either in the interventional group with a rehabilitation program or in the control group without rehabilitation program. Patients who are randomized in the control group are allowed to perform the rehabilitation program 12 months after randomisation. Patients in the interventional group will perform structured exercise training on 3 weekdays during a 12-weeks period. Training will be performed by ergometer and low-impact gymnastic and relaxation training. All study participants have the following investigations at the beginning of the study and after 12 weeks: * Cardiopulmonary exercise testing with spirometry * 6-minute walk test * Blood work: BNP, Creatinine, Sodium, Potassium, Urat, Cholesterol (HDL-L and LDL-L) * Validated Heart failure questionnaires (SF-36 and Minnesota Living with heart failure questionnaire, German version for Basel, Zürich and Bern) All tests will be repeated as clinically indicated in a follow-up visit 12 months after baseline Primary outcome is: Comparison of peak VO2 at the end of rehabilitation between both groups. Secondary outcomes are: * Comparison of 6-min walk test, VE/VCO2 slope, anaerobic threshold and heart rate and blood pressure response after rehabilitation between both groups * Changes of 6-min walk test, peak VO2, VE/VCO2 slope, anaerobic threshold and heart rate and blood pressure response at the end and 12 months after rehabilitation. * Changes of quality-of-life assessed by validated heart failure questionnaire at the end and 12 months after rehabilitation and comparison between both groups. * Changes of levels of brain-natriuretic peptide at the end and 12 months after rehabilitation. * Adverse events during rehabilitation including new onset of arrhythmia, admission due to worsening heart failure or death. The calculated sample size to reach a power of 0.80 is 83 patients in each arm. Patients with complex CHD and exercise intolerance are at increased risk for premature death and severe cardiac complications including arrhythmia needing treatment, heart failure and circulatory failure, pulmonary hemorrhage, pulmonary embolism and endocarditis. Hence, the likelihood of major adverse cardiac events during the study phase is considerably high. However, there is no evidence of functional worsening by low-level exercise. Smaller studies with patients with congenital heart disease and/or pulmonary hypertension did not report safety issues. Although sudden cardiac death is one of the leading modes of death in this population, it is extremely rare that sudden death occurs during exercise. Cardiac patients who are at specific risk for exercise-induced arrhythmia are not included into the study (i.e. patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
28
12 weeks low level ambulatory structured exercise training
Virgen Macarena University Hospital
Seville, Spain
University Hospital Basel
Basel, Switzerland
Inselspital Bern
Bern, Switzerland
University Hospital Zurich
Zurich, Switzerland
peak VO2
Comparison between both groups
Time frame: 12 weeks
6 minute walk test
between both groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 weeks
VE/VCO2
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 weeks
heart rate response
Difference between peak heart rate and resting heart rate Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 weeks
QoL
Comparison between groups and within groups Minnesota Heart failure Score and SF 36
Time frame: 12 weeks
BNP
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 weeks
Adverse events
cardiac related adverse events including cardiac death
Time frame: 12 weeks
peak VO2
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
VE/VCO2
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
Heart rate response
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
6 minute walk test
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
QoL
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
BNP
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
Cardiac adverse events
Comparison between groups and within groups
Time frame: 12 months
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