26,523 subjects from 595 published studies focusing on incremental CPET in chronic lung conditions, and 295 patients responding to an online survey.
Standardized cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) protocols on a stationary cycle ergometer and a treadmill.
Standardization of published CPET protocols for improved interpretation in clinical settings and multicentre research projects.
This ERS statement establishes standardized protocols for cardiopulmonary exercise testing in chronic lung diseases to improve clinical interpretation and multicenter research.
The objective of this document was to standardise published cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) protocols for improved interpretation in clinical settings and multicentre research projects. This document: 1) summarises the protocols and procedures used in published studies focusing on incremental CPET in chronic lung conditions; 2) presents standard incremental protocols for CPET on a stationary cycle ergometer and a treadmill; and 3) provides patients' perspectives on CPET obtained through an online survey supported by the European Lung Foundation. We systematically reviewed published studies obtained from EMBASE, Medline, Scopus, Web of Science and the Cochrane Library from inception to January 2017. Of 7914 identified studies, 595 studies with 26 523 subjects were included. The literature supports a test protocol with a resting phase lasting at least 3 min, a 3-min unloaded phase, and an 8- to 12-min incremental phase with work rate increased linearly at least every minute, followed by a recovery phase of at least 2-3 min. Patients responding to the survey (n=295) perceived CPET as highly beneficial for their diagnostic assessment and informed the Task Force consensus. Future research should focus on the individualised estimation of optimal work rate increments across different lung diseases, and the collection of robust normative data.
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Thomas Radtke
University of Zurich
Sarah Crook
Child Health and Development Institute
Georgios Kaltsakas
King's College London
European Respiratory Review
Inserm
University of Edinburgh
Sorbonne Université
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Radtke et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69de7b0a57c7c8340a5588ee — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1183/16000617.0101-2018