Older and more frail adults are more often being referred for cardiac surgery. These patients are often in suboptimal health, and may be physically frail, malnourished, and have other conditions, such as diabetes, that complicate their recovery. Research suggests that a rehabilitation program prior to surgery may help improve participants' health and improve their fitness for surgery. Currently, a pre-operative rehabilitation workshop is offered at the University of Ottawa Heart Institute, but this interventional, randomized study will investigate whether a more comprehensive pre-operative regime, including structured weekly exercise program, is more effective at improving health prior to surgery. Patients will be randomized to either the control group (pre-operative rehabilitation workshop ONLY) or the treatment group (pre-operative rehabilitation workshop plus exercise regime). This regime will attempt to improve patients' overall health, including their physical fitness and nutritional status. The effectiveness of this regime will be evaluated by comparing patients' physical function, questionnaires (diet, quality of life, stress) and serum biomarkers from baseline to pre-surgery to post-surgery. The Investigators hypothesize that patients that complete the pre-operative rehabilitation program will improve their health prior to surgery, and that this may result in shorter length of hospitalization and fewer complications after surgery. The study will take place over two years, with each patient's participation lasting about 3 months.
Frailty is a common syndrome among older adults, defined as a "clinically recognizable state of increased vulnerability resulting from aging-associated decline in reserve and function". Fried defined frailty as meeting three out of the five criteria: low grip strength, low energy, slowed walking speed, low physical activity, and/or unintentional weight loss. Clinicians are currently challenged with a rising prevalence of elderly and frail patients presenting for major cardiac surgery. Such patients typically present with a greater comorbidity burden and are more likely to be malnourished, physically deconditioned, and to exhibit decreased physiological adaptation to stress. Frail cardiac surgical patients are, unsurprisingly, at increased risk for major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events, short- and longer-term mortality, and increased length of hospital of stay. Clinicians may also struggle to quantify the peri-operative risk of morbidity and mortality among these individuals, since tools such as the Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) risk assessment are not designed to comprehensively assess the complex interaction between various risk factors seen in the frail patient. Cardiovascular rehabilitation (CR) programs are integral to managing patients with cardiovascular disease. Such programs include health behaviour change, and cardiovascular risk factor management (e.g. moderate-to-vigorous-intensity continuous exercise training \[MICE\], healthy eating, smoking cessation, stress management, and psychological services). The benefits of MICE for patients with cardiovascular disease include improvements in exercise tolerance, muscular strength, cardiovascular health and reduced hospitalizations. MICE is, therefore, able to improve several facets of physical dysfunction, and forms major therapeutic interventions for functional capacity and frailty. Improvements in nutritional status have been observed in patients with cardiovascular disease(CVD) participating in CR, and exercise training and stress management have been shown to reduce distress in CVD patients. Emerging evidence indicates that CR before cardiac surgery (i.e. prehabilitation \[PREHAB\]) may improve clinical outcomes. Sawatzky et al. showed that a 12-week PREHAB program consisting of two structured exercise training sessions per week and 12 education sessions concerning cardiovascular risk factor management, exercise, stress, diet, and medication use in patients awaiting coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was feasible and significantly improved functional capacity. Elderly and frail patients are increasingly presenting for cardiac surgery, and these individuals must be carefully optimized pre-operatively to increase the likelihood of their recovery and return to a reasonable quality of life. A personalized PREHAB program that targets and ameliorates the elements of frailty, including low functional capacity, poor nutrition, and stress, offers the best chance of mitigating frailty and its associated risk factors in a way that is feasible, patient-centred, and translatable to other cardiovascular centres. This project will use objective measures, including tests of functional capacity, validated questionnaires, and biomarker analysis, to better quantify the subjective diagnosis of frailty in our patients, and will implement a novel personalized PREHAB program with integrated on-site and home-based exercise sessions, in an attempt to mitigate the frailty and other risk factors that impact patients in the peri-operative period.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
PREHAB workshop/education session in the Prevention and Rehabilitation Centre regarding nursing, nutrition, physiotherapy, psychology, and diabetes.
An 8-week program that consists of: (1) 2x/week 60-minute supervised exercise sessions; and (2) 3x/week 30-minute home-based exercise sessions.
University of Ottawa Heart Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Functional capacity
The primary outcome, functional capacity, will be measured using the 6-minute walk test.
Time frame: Change between baseline and 8 weeks (+/- 1 week)
Frailty (Fried criteria)
Measured using the Fried frailty score (presence of 3 of the 5 symptoms of frailty)
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Frailty (clinical score)
Measured using the Clinical Frailty Scale (9 point clinical assessment)
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Short Form - 36
Measured using the SF-36 Quality of Life questionnaire
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Depression
Measured using the BDI-II
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Anxiety
Measured using the BAI
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Dietary habits
Measured using the Block food frequency questionnaire
Time frame: Compared between baseline, 8 weeks (+/- 1 week), and 4 weeks after surgery (+/- 2 weeks)
Exercise adherence
Measured using a pedometer
Time frame: Compared between baseline and 8 weeks (+/- 1 week)
Clinical and cardiovascular outcomes
A composite endpoint that will look at the rates of occurrence of major cardiovascular and cerebrovascular outcomes (i.e. death, myocardial infarction, cardiac arrest, stroke) and length of hospitalization.
Time frame: In the 6 weeks after surgery
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