Does pulmonary rehabilitation improve health-related quality of life and exercise capacity in patients with COPD after an exacerbation?
Pulmonary rehabilitation improves quality of life and exercise capacity after COPD exacerbations, though effects on readmissions and mortality are heterogeneous.
Overall, evidence of high quality shows moderate to large effects of rehabilitation on health-related quality of life and exercise capacity in patients with COPD after an exacerbation. Some recent studies showed no benefit of rehabilitation on hospital readmissions and mortality and introduced heterogeneity as compared with the last update of this review. Such heterogeneity of effects on hospital readmissions and mortality may be explained to some extent by the extensiveness of rehabilitation programmes and by the methodological quality of the included studies. Future researchers must investigate how the extent of rehabilitation programmes in terms of exercise sessions, self-management education and other components affects the outcomes, and how the organisation of such programmes within specific healthcare systems determines their effects after COPD exacerbations on hospital readmissions and mortality.
Puhan et al. (Thu,) studied this question.