Despite the well-known health benefits of physical exercise in the prevention of chronic diseases, less attention has been focused on the use of physical exercise as an essential part of good treatment for chronic disease. The aims of the study are to investigate the feasibility, medical effects, cost-effectiveness, and social perspectives of the individualized exercise-based rehabilitation \[2 different high-intensity training (HIT) protocols combined with usual care (UC)\] after acute coronary artery disease (CAD) event. The medical aim is to study mediating mechanisms of the physiological, biochemical and molecular effects of exercise training on the clinical outcomes. The aim of the health-economic evaluation is to assess the changes in the Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQL) and health care related costs for estimating the cost-effectiveness of HIT-based exercise rehabilitation. The purpose of the sociological analysis is to find out the social processes which make possible the emergence of the desired welfare effects.
The study population consists of patients living in the city of Kuopio or Siilinjarvi area in Eastern Finland, who have been treated in Kuopio University Hospital because of acute CAD event. After baseline measurements, the patients will be randomized into one of the 3 groups: short interval HIT protocol (HIT-S), long interval HIT protocol (HIT-L) or UC group. The intervention will be 12 months per patient and the expected duration of the whole study (intervention data collection) is estimated to be 4 years. In addition, all groups will have annual follow-up examinations scheduled up to 60 months after initiation of the intervention phase. The patients recruited for the study will be 750, a total of 250 patients per study group. All measurements related to intervention will be performed at Kuopio Research Institute of Exercise Medicine. Examinations concerning myocardial structure and perfusion will be done at Turku PET Center (subsample). The study complies with the Helsinki declaration, follows good clinical practice. Patient safety will follow normal medical practice. The intervention is not anticipated to cause health risks apart from the conventional treatment. All participants will be provided with diverse individualized information about their health and physical performance. The research methods employed in the study are safe. Physician and nurse will be present at each occasion when physically strenuous measurements are performed and careful provisions for appropriate first aid will be made. The measurements assessing cardiorespiratory and muscular fitness will involve hard effort and it is not unusual to feel innocent muscle pain for a few days after measurements demanding maximal effort. The other potential acute complications may include accidents (e.g. injuries due to slipping or falling) and medical emergencies like acute myocardial infarction. Study hypotheses: 1. Short (15 sec) and long interval (3 min) high-intensity aerobic interval training (HIT) combined with resistance training after acute CAD event are equally effective in improving cardiorespiratory fitness compared with UC. 2. Despite higher unit costs, the differences in health-related quality of life effects are so large that both HIT interventions are cost-effective compared with UC. 3. Patient's experiences and interpretation of HIT exercise as well as different social processes during rehabilitation explain the cost-effectiveness of the rehabilitation. 4. Patient groups who will or will not benefit of HIT interventions can be identified and predicted.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
27
The intensity of HIT-S sessions (cycle ergometer) will be increased during 3 to 6 months from 60% of VO2peak to 100% which will be the target intensity from 6 to 12 months. The protocol includes four 6 min sets consisting of 15 sec exercise followed by 15 sec passive recovery separated with 3 min passive recovery between sets. Exercise session will last ca. 40 min, with 12 min of HIT, warm-up and recovery. The intensity of the 15 seconds exercise bouts will be based on VO2peak at baseline and after 6 months. Meanwhile, the estimated VO2peak from the submaximal test will be used to adjust the training intensity in HIT sessions. Training will be conducted in a group of 1-3 HIT-S patients with ECG monitoring and supervised by physician.
The intensity of HIT-L sessions (cycle ergometer) will be increased during 3 to 6 months from 60% of VO2peak to 90% which will be the target intensity from 6 to 12 months. The protocol includes four 3 min exercise bouts with a 4 min recovery (pedaling at 0 W) between bouts. Exercise session will last ca. 40 min, with 12 min of HIT, warm-up and recovery. The intensity of the 3 min exercise bouts will be based on VO2peak at baseline and after 6 months. Meanwhile, the estimated VO2peak from the submaximal test will be used to adjust the training intensity in HIT sessions. Training will be conducted in a group of 1-3 HIT-L patients with ECG monitoring and supervised by physician.
Kuopio Research Institute of Exercise Medicine
Kuopio, Finland
Change in cardiorespiratory fitness as assessed by peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak)
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
Incremental health care cost/quality-adjusted life-year-relation
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
Social processes explaining adherence and motivation to exercise rehabilitation
Social analysis will be performed by specific questionnaires and interviews. Subjective perceptions on the social mechanisms impacting on health and well-being as a part of the rehabilitation processes will be also be modelled using comparative causal mapping techniques (CMT) (See http://www.uef.fi/fi/cmap3).
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
Total costs of the use of health care services
The use of total health services will be assessed by diary, questionnaire and from registers (national, hospital district and domicile health center).
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
Utilization of health care resources
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
Change in health-related quality of life
Time frame: Baseline, 6 and 12 months
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