A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study

Publication Date:
2018-04-10
Publisher:
BMJ Publishing
Electronic ISSN:
2044-6055
Topics:
Medicine
Keywords:
Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
Published by:
_version_ 1836398884225548290
autor Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
beschreibung Introduction Home-based cardiac rehabilitation may overcome suboptimal rates of participation. The overarching aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the novel Rehabilitation EnAblement in CHronic Hear Failure (REACH-HF) rehabilitation intervention for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and their caregivers. Methods and results Patients were randomised 1:1 to REACH-HF intervention plus usual care (intervention group) or usual care alone (control group). REACH-HF is a home-based comprehensive self-management rehabilitation programme that comprises patient and carer manuals with supplementary tools, delivered by trained healthcare facilitators over a 12 week period. Patient outcomes were collected by blinded assessors at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postrandomisation and included health-related quality of life (primary) and psychological well-being, exercise capacity, physical activity and HF-related hospitalisation (secondary). Outcomes were also collected in caregivers. We enrolled 50 symptomatic patients with HF from Tayside, Scotland with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≥45% (mean age 73.9 years, 54% female, 100% white British) and 21 caregivers. Study retention (90%) and intervention uptake (92%) were excellent. At 6 months, data from 45 patients showed a potential direction of effect in favour of the intervention group, including the primary outcome of Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score (between-group mean difference –11.5, 95% CI –22.8 to 0.3). A total of 11 (4 intervention, 7 control) patients experienced a hospital admission over the 6 months of follow-up with 4 (control patients) of these admissions being HF-related. Improvements were seen in a number intervention caregivers' mental health and burden compared with control. Conclusions Our findings support the feasibility and rationale for delivering the REACH-HF facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention for patients with HFpEF and their caregivers and progression to a full multicentre randomised clinical trial to test its clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration number ISRCTN78539530.
citation_standardnr 6230250
datenlieferant ipn_articles
feed_id 151627
feed_publisher BMJ Publishing
feed_publisher_url http://group.bmj.com/
insertion_date 2018-04-10
journaleissn 2044-6055
publikationsjahr_anzeige 2018
publikationsjahr_facette 2018
publikationsjahr_intervall 7984:2015-2019
publikationsjahr_sort 2018
publisher BMJ Publishing
quelle BMJ Open
relation http://bmjopen.bmj.com/cgi/content/short/8/4/e019649?rss=1
schlagwort Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
search_space articles
shingle_author_1 Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
shingle_author_2 Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
shingle_author_3 Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
shingle_author_4 Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
shingle_catch_all_1 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
Introduction Home-based cardiac rehabilitation may overcome suboptimal rates of participation. The overarching aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the novel Rehabilitation EnAblement in CHronic Hear Failure (REACH-HF) rehabilitation intervention for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and their caregivers. Methods and results Patients were randomised 1:1 to REACH-HF intervention plus usual care (intervention group) or usual care alone (control group). REACH-HF is a home-based comprehensive self-management rehabilitation programme that comprises patient and carer manuals with supplementary tools, delivered by trained healthcare facilitators over a 12 week period. Patient outcomes were collected by blinded assessors at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postrandomisation and included health-related quality of life (primary) and psychological well-being, exercise capacity, physical activity and HF-related hospitalisation (secondary). Outcomes were also collected in caregivers. We enrolled 50 symptomatic patients with HF from Tayside, Scotland with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≥45% (mean age 73.9 years, 54% female, 100% white British) and 21 caregivers. Study retention (90%) and intervention uptake (92%) were excellent. At 6 months, data from 45 patients showed a potential direction of effect in favour of the intervention group, including the primary outcome of Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score (between-group mean difference –11.5, 95% CI –22.8 to 0.3). A total of 11 (4 intervention, 7 control) patients experienced a hospital admission over the 6 months of follow-up with 4 (control patients) of these admissions being HF-related. Improvements were seen in a number intervention caregivers' mental health and burden compared with control. Conclusions Our findings support the feasibility and rationale for delivering the REACH-HF facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention for patients with HFpEF and their caregivers and progression to a full multicentre randomised clinical trial to test its clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration number ISRCTN78539530.
Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
BMJ Publishing
2044-6055
20446055
shingle_catch_all_2 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
Introduction Home-based cardiac rehabilitation may overcome suboptimal rates of participation. The overarching aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the novel Rehabilitation EnAblement in CHronic Hear Failure (REACH-HF) rehabilitation intervention for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and their caregivers. Methods and results Patients were randomised 1:1 to REACH-HF intervention plus usual care (intervention group) or usual care alone (control group). REACH-HF is a home-based comprehensive self-management rehabilitation programme that comprises patient and carer manuals with supplementary tools, delivered by trained healthcare facilitators over a 12 week period. Patient outcomes were collected by blinded assessors at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postrandomisation and included health-related quality of life (primary) and psychological well-being, exercise capacity, physical activity and HF-related hospitalisation (secondary). Outcomes were also collected in caregivers. We enrolled 50 symptomatic patients with HF from Tayside, Scotland with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≥45% (mean age 73.9 years, 54% female, 100% white British) and 21 caregivers. Study retention (90%) and intervention uptake (92%) were excellent. At 6 months, data from 45 patients showed a potential direction of effect in favour of the intervention group, including the primary outcome of Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score (between-group mean difference –11.5, 95% CI –22.8 to 0.3). A total of 11 (4 intervention, 7 control) patients experienced a hospital admission over the 6 months of follow-up with 4 (control patients) of these admissions being HF-related. Improvements were seen in a number intervention caregivers' mental health and burden compared with control. Conclusions Our findings support the feasibility and rationale for delivering the REACH-HF facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention for patients with HFpEF and their caregivers and progression to a full multicentre randomised clinical trial to test its clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration number ISRCTN78539530.
Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
BMJ Publishing
2044-6055
20446055
shingle_catch_all_3 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
Introduction Home-based cardiac rehabilitation may overcome suboptimal rates of participation. The overarching aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the novel Rehabilitation EnAblement in CHronic Hear Failure (REACH-HF) rehabilitation intervention for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and their caregivers. Methods and results Patients were randomised 1:1 to REACH-HF intervention plus usual care (intervention group) or usual care alone (control group). REACH-HF is a home-based comprehensive self-management rehabilitation programme that comprises patient and carer manuals with supplementary tools, delivered by trained healthcare facilitators over a 12 week period. Patient outcomes were collected by blinded assessors at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postrandomisation and included health-related quality of life (primary) and psychological well-being, exercise capacity, physical activity and HF-related hospitalisation (secondary). Outcomes were also collected in caregivers. We enrolled 50 symptomatic patients with HF from Tayside, Scotland with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≥45% (mean age 73.9 years, 54% female, 100% white British) and 21 caregivers. Study retention (90%) and intervention uptake (92%) were excellent. At 6 months, data from 45 patients showed a potential direction of effect in favour of the intervention group, including the primary outcome of Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score (between-group mean difference –11.5, 95% CI –22.8 to 0.3). A total of 11 (4 intervention, 7 control) patients experienced a hospital admission over the 6 months of follow-up with 4 (control patients) of these admissions being HF-related. Improvements were seen in a number intervention caregivers' mental health and burden compared with control. Conclusions Our findings support the feasibility and rationale for delivering the REACH-HF facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention for patients with HFpEF and their caregivers and progression to a full multicentre randomised clinical trial to test its clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration number ISRCTN78539530.
Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
BMJ Publishing
2044-6055
20446055
shingle_catch_all_4 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
Open access, Cardiovascular medicine
Introduction Home-based cardiac rehabilitation may overcome suboptimal rates of participation. The overarching aim of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the novel Rehabilitation EnAblement in CHronic Hear Failure (REACH-HF) rehabilitation intervention for patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and their caregivers. Methods and results Patients were randomised 1:1 to REACH-HF intervention plus usual care (intervention group) or usual care alone (control group). REACH-HF is a home-based comprehensive self-management rehabilitation programme that comprises patient and carer manuals with supplementary tools, delivered by trained healthcare facilitators over a 12 week period. Patient outcomes were collected by blinded assessors at baseline, 3 months and 6 months postrandomisation and included health-related quality of life (primary) and psychological well-being, exercise capacity, physical activity and HF-related hospitalisation (secondary). Outcomes were also collected in caregivers. We enrolled 50 symptomatic patients with HF from Tayside, Scotland with a left ventricular ejection fraction ≥45% (mean age 73.9 years, 54% female, 100% white British) and 21 caregivers. Study retention (90%) and intervention uptake (92%) were excellent. At 6 months, data from 45 patients showed a potential direction of effect in favour of the intervention group, including the primary outcome of Minnesota Living with Heart Failure Questionnaire total score (between-group mean difference –11.5, 95% CI –22.8 to 0.3). A total of 11 (4 intervention, 7 control) patients experienced a hospital admission over the 6 months of follow-up with 4 (control patients) of these admissions being HF-related. Improvements were seen in a number intervention caregivers' mental health and burden compared with control. Conclusions Our findings support the feasibility and rationale for delivering the REACH-HF facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention for patients with HFpEF and their caregivers and progression to a full multicentre randomised clinical trial to test its clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness. Trial registration number ISRCTN78539530.
Lang, C. C., Smith, K., Wingham, J., Eyre, V., Greaves, C. J., Warren, F. C., Green, C., Jolly, K., Davis, R. C., Doherty, P. J., Miles, J., Britten, N., Abraham, C., Van Lingen, R., Singh, S. J., Paul, K., Hillsdon, M., Sadler, S., Hayward, C., Dalal, H. M., Taylor, R. S., and on behalf of the REACH-HF investigators,
BMJ Publishing
2044-6055
20446055
shingle_title_1 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
shingle_title_2 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
shingle_title_3 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
shingle_title_4 A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
timestamp 2025-06-30T23:34:10.271Z
titel A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
titel_suche A randomised controlled trial of a facilitated home-based rehabilitation intervention in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and their caregivers: the REACH-HFpEF Pilot Study
topic WW-YZ
uid ipn_articles_6230250