A 24-week tailored exercise program did not improve 6-minute walk distance compared to usual care in older patients with heart failure (difference -5.3 m; 95% CI -32.6 to 22.0; P=0.70).
RCT (n=107)
single-blind
randomized
Does a 24-week tailored exercise program improve six-minute walk distance in functionally impaired older patients with symptomatic heart failure and left ventricular systolic dysfunction?
A tailored 24-week exercise program did not improve exercise capacity, quality of life, or healthcare costs in older, functionally impaired patients with symptomatic heart failure.
Effect estimate: difference -5.3 m (95% CI -32.6 to 22.0)
p-value: p=0.70
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the optimum way to deliver exercise to older, functionally impaired patients with heart failure. We tested whether an exercise program tailored to the needs of these patients could improve exercise capacity and quality of life or reduce costs to the National Health Service. METHODS AND RESULTS: The study design was a parallel-group, single-blind, randomized controlled trial. Patients aged ≥70 years with symptomatic heart failure and left ventricular systolic dysfunction were randomized to either 24 weeks of exercise training or usual care. Six-minute walk distance was the primary outcome; markers of physical function, quality of life, health status, and daily activity were measured at baseline and 8 and 24 weeks. Carer strain and healthcare costs were also recorded. A total of 107 participants were randomized (mean age, 80 years; men, 72 67%). Six-minute walk distance did not improve compared to that of the control group at 8 weeks (-16.9 m; 95% CI, -41.8 to 7.9 m; P=0.18) or at 24 weeks (-5.3 m; 95% CI, -32.6 to 22.0 m; P=0.70). For secondary outcomes, only the sit-to-stand test improved significantly at 24 weeks (-6.4 s; 95% CI, -12.2 to 0.6 s; P=0.03); there was no difference in change for the Minnesota Living With Heart Failure score (0.1 points; 95% CI, -0.9 to 1.1 points; P=0.83) at 24 weeks. Carer strain did not decrease at 24 weeks (difference, -0.5 points; 95% CI, -8.3 to 7.3 points; P=0.80), and there was no difference in overall healthcare costs. CONCLUSIONS: This exercise intervention did not improve exercise capacity or quality of life in older patients with heart failure and was not cost saving to the National Health Service. Clinical Trial Registration- URL: http://www.controlled-trials.com. Unique identifier: ISRCTN51615566.
Witham et al. (Tue,) conducted a rct in symptomatic heart failure and left ventricular systolic dysfunction (n=107). exercise training vs. usual care was evaluated on Six-minute walk distance (difference -5.3 m, 95% CI -32.6 to 22.0, p=0.70). A 24-week tailored exercise program did not improve 6-minute walk distance compared to usual care in older patients with heart failure (difference -5.3 m; 95% CI -32.6 to 22.0; P=0.70).
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