Background and importance: Hypertension is highly prevalent among Canadians with non-dialysis dependent chronic kidney disease (CKD). It is a modifiable risk factor for both cardiovascular (CV) events and CKD progression. Exercise is an effective strategy for blood pressure (BP) reduction in the general population but in people with CKD, hypertension is mediated by different causes (i.e. vascular stiffness, volume expansion) and it is unclear whether exercise will reduce BP in this population. Consequently, exercise resources are not offered in the routine multidisciplinary care of people with CKD and the prevalence of sedentary behaviour remains double that of the general population. The role of exercise in CKD management is also an important question for patients. From CIHR-supported workshops with patients, the role of lifestyle, such as exercise in CKD was a top research priority. Research aims: i.To determine the effect of exercise on mean ambulatory systolic blood pressure (SBP) in people with CKD compared to usual care. The investigators hypothesize that exercise training will significantly reduce BP compared to control. ii.To inform the design of a larger, multi-center trial evaluating the effect of exercise on the risk of CKD progression. Methods: A 160 participant, single center randomized trial of adults from Alberta Kidney Care North CKD clinics, Edmonton, Albert, Canada. Participants with an estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) of 15-44 ml/min per 1.73m2 and SBP \>130 mmHg will be randomized, stratified by eGFR (\<30 versus ≥ 30) to an exercise intervention or usual care. The main outcome is the difference in 24-hour ambulatory SBP after eight weeks of exercise training between groups. Secondary outcomes include: BPs at eight and 24 weeks, dose of anti-hypertensives, aortic stiffness, CV-risk markers, CV fitness, 7-day accelerometry, quality of life, safety, and in an exploratory analysis, eGFR and proteinuria. The intervention is thrice weekly moderate intensity aerobic exercise supplemented with isometric resistance exercise, targeting 150 minutes per week and delivered over 24-weeks. Phase 1: one supervised weekly sessions and home-based sessions (eight weeks). Phase 2: home-based sessions (16 weeks). To detect a clinically important BP reduction of 5 mmHg between groups requires 128 patients (two sample t-test, alpha 0.05, beta 0.2, common standard deviation of 10 mmHg). Assuming 20% dropout requires 160 patients. For the primary outcome, the investigators will use a mixed linear regression model in which BP is regressed on group, baseline SBP and eGFR, and time point. Expected outcomes: The findings from this study will address a significant knowledge gap in hypertension management in CKD, inform care-delivery and the design of a larger study on CKD progression. This proposal aligns with priorities for both patients and decision makers: to identify the role of exercise in CKD management and to reshape the delivery of renal care so that it is more consistent with patient values and preferences.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
44
See previous description
See previous description
Royal Alexandra Hospital
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
University of Alberta Hospital, outpatient dialysis unit
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Grey Nuns Hospital
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
24-hour ambulatory SBP
mean 24-hour ambulatory systolic blood pressure
Time frame: 8 weeks
antihypertensive use
Using the assigned DDD (WHO) for that drug
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
KDQOL-36
Kidney Disease and Quality of Life instrument - this is a short form that includes the SF-12 plus the burden of kidney disease, symptoms/problems of kidney disease, and effects of kidney disease scales from the KDQOL-SF
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
IPAQ-SF
International Physical Activity Questionnaire - Short Form
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
SEE scale
Self Efficacy for Exercise questionnaire - the total score ranges from 0 to 90. High scores indicate higher self-efficacy in exercise. There are 9 questions; responses vary from 0 to 10. The mean score on each question is 5.5.
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
EQ-5D
European Quality of Life (EuroQOL) health questionnaire with 5 dimensions
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
pulse wave velocity
measurement of aortic stiffness (femoral carotid, radial carotid)
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
body mass index
calculated as weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
Fat mass
Body composition using bioimpedance spectroscopy
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
clinic blood pressure
with a oscillometric sphygmomanometer
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
Oxygen uptake (VO2 peak)
Cardiopulmonary exercise testing
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
estimated glomerular filtration rate
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
c-reactive protein
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
total cholesterol
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
LDL
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
HDL
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
triglycerides
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
HgA1C
glycated hemoglobin
Time frame: 24 weeks
spot urinary sodium
measured on a non-exercise day
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
spot urinary protein
measured on a non-exercise day
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
number of steps
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
sedentary time
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
time in light activity
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
time in moderate activity
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
time in vigorous activity
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
time in very vigorous activity
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
METS
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
7-day accelerometry
sedentary bouts
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
24-hour ABPM
daytime, night time systolic and diastolic BP
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
Adherence
70% of in centre sessions attended and 70% of home sessions performed prescribed (accelerometry and log book)
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
Body cell mass
Body composition using bioimpedance spectroscopy
Time frame: 8 and 24 weeks
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