Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is a major individual, social and economic burden worldwide. Pulmonary rehabilitation is a fundamental evidence-based intervention to manage COPD. However, pulmonary rehabilitation benefits tend to decline over time and sustaining a long-term physical activity lifestyle is challenging, leading to worse health-related quality of life. Personalised post-pulmonary rehabilitation programmes, combining different physical activities modalities with social interaction, are warranted to enable a shift from a disease-based to a patient-centred model and encourage a sustainable behavioural change. Although such programmes have the potential to sustain pulmonary rehabilitation benefits and promote patients' long-term adherence to physical activity, their availability within the community is scarce. Hence, the investigators will implement a personalised community-based physical activity programme (PICk UP), using the available resources, adapted to patient's needs/preferences. PICk UP will be a sustainable response to support healthy lifestyles and enhance pulmonary rehabilitation benefits of respiratory patients, by integrating them within the community and embracing urban facilities. The aim of this study is to assess the effectiveness of PICk UP, a personalised community-based physical activity programme, tailored to patients' needs and preferences, on their physical activity levels. It is expected that PICk UP will empower patients to remain physically active and foster the maintenance of pulmonary rehabilitation benefits.


Clinical Trial Description

COPD-related morbidity and mortality has been increasing, making COPD already the third leading cause of death and a growing global health concern. Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is a comprehensive intervention, with known cost-effectiveness in managing patients with COPD. One of the PR goals is to improve physical activity (PA), since it has shown to reduce exacerbations and mortality. Nevertheless, adopting/sustaining a physically active behaviour is highly challenging and benefits of PR are usually lost 6 months after its completion. Therefore, PA programmes capable to maintain the PR effects are urgently needed Community can provide different PA modalities in various settings, which can be personalised to patients' needs and preferences. By filling the gaps between healthcare systems and patients' daily environment, these programmes have the potential to improve patients' HRQoL and self-efficacy, enhancing their ability to overcome exercise barriers and their motivation to sustain a physically active behaviour. PICk UP will offer patients different PA modalities tailored to their preferences and needs, thus personalising the community programmes, and aiming at sustaining a physically active behaviour and enhancing their HRQoL. This study aims at assessing the effectiveness of PICk UP, a personalised community-based physical activity programme tailored to patients' needs and preferences, on their physical activity levels and on the maintenance of pulmonary rehabilitation benefits. To accomplish these aims a randomised controlled trial will be conducted. PICk UP randomised controlled trial The primary aim of this study is to assess the effectiveness of PICk UP, a personalised community-based PA programme, tailored to patients' needs and preferences, on their PA levels. The secondary aims is to determine the short- and mid-term effects of PICk UP on HRQoL symptoms, number of exacerbations, healthcare use, exercise capacity, functionality, motivation to exercise, peripheral muscle strength and emotional status. Recruitment Primary healthcare providers of Aveiro and Estarreja or pulmonologists of the Centro Hospitalar do Baixo Vouga will inform eligible patients about the study. Additional information will be provided to those interested to participate in a meeting with the researcher and written informed consent will be acquired. Patients with COPD will be eligible if they are clinically stable, as determined by their referred doctor, and completed a PR programme in the previous month. Patients will be excluded if they present signs of cognitive impairment or have significant cardiovascular, neurological or musculoskeletal diseases, which may limit their participation. Study design Patients will be randomised into experimental group (EG) or control group (CG). The EG will receive the PICk UP programme. The CG will receive no additional interventions and will only proceed with the physical activity recommendations delivered during the pulmonary rehabilitation programme. Assessments will be conducted by a second researcher blinded to the intervention. Data collection: Data will be collected at baseline, after 3 months and after the intervention (6 months). The researcher will collect: - Sociodemographic, anthropometric, general clinical data (e.g., number of exacerbations or healthcare utilisation); - Physical activity levels (time in sedentary, moderate and vigorous physical activities; steps/day): accelerometry. - Health related quality of life: St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire. - Disease impact: COPD Assessment Test. - Exercise tolerance: six-minute walk test. - Motivations to exercise: Behavioural Regulation and Exercise Questionnaire-3. - Quadriceps muscle strength: Handheld dynamometry. - Fatigue: Checklist of Individual Strength-8 and the Functional assessment of chronic illness therapy fatigue subscale; - Handgrip strength: dynamometry. - Emotional status: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. - Occurrence of adverse events and adherence to the interventions Intervention: Participants in the EG will enrol a 6-months personalised community-based physical activity programme, which will include 2 sessions/week, with the aerobic training being the cornerstone. Patients will receive the PICk UP manual and a diary to register their physical activities. During the 1st month the physiotherapist will guide patients through 4 types of outdoors (e.g., walking, cycling trails) and indoors (e.g., dance, pilates) physical activities. Patients will then be asked to choose and commit to 1 or 2 activities, according to their preferences, which they shall integrate for another 5 months. During this period, the support provided by physiotherapist will decrease over time - 2nd and 3rd months: support every 2-weeks (face-to-face physical activity sessions alternated with phone-calls) to reassure safety, clarify doubts, monitor patients' evolution and enhance their motivation to physical activity; - 4th month: 1 face-to-face physical activity session; - 5th month: 1 phone-call; - 6th month: no support. The sport-related professionals will register patients' attendance to the programme. Sample size estimation: The sample size was estimated using G*Power 3.1.9.6, with an effect size specification "as in G*Power 3.0", for the within-between interaction of a repeated measures ANOVA with two groups (control and experimental) and 3 measurements (immediately after, 3 and 6 months post-PR) of the defined primary outcome (time in moderate to vigorous PA). The investigators considered an α of 0.05, a power of 0.80, a repeated measures correlation of 0.5, a nonsphericity correction of 1 and an expected effect size f of 0.30. The effect size f was derived from the partial η2 of 0.21 (f=0.516) obtained from a study which aimed to assess the impact of a PA-focused behavioural intervention during and after PR on PA levels in patients with COPD. A smaller f value of 0.30 was chosen to account for a longer follow-up period (up to 6 months after PR, instead of 3) and differences in selected time-points. The calculated sample size was 20 (i.e., 10 in each group) COPD patients and considering a possible 50% dropout rate, the final sample size was determined to be 40. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04223362
Study type Interventional
Source Aveiro University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date February 5, 2020
Completion date January 31, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Active, not recruiting NCT06000696 - Healthy at Home Pilot
Active, not recruiting NCT03927820 - A Pharmacist-Led Intervention to Increase Inhaler Access and Reduce Hospital Readmissions (PILLAR) N/A
Completed NCT04043728 - Addressing Psychological Risk Factors Underlying Smoking Persistence in COPD Patients: The Fresh Start Study N/A
Completed NCT04105075 - COPD in Obese Patients
Recruiting NCT05825261 - Exploring Novel Biomarkers for Emphysema Detection
Active, not recruiting NCT04075331 - Mepolizumab for COPD Hospital Eosinophilic Admissions Pragmatic Trial Phase 2/Phase 3
Terminated NCT03640260 - Respiratory Regulation With Biofeedback in COPD N/A
Recruiting NCT04872309 - MUlti-nuclear MR Imaging Investigation of Respiratory Disease-associated CHanges in Lung Physiology
Recruiting NCT05145894 - Differentiation of Asthma/COPD Exacerbation and Stable State Using Automated Lung Sound Analysis With LungPass Device
Withdrawn NCT04210050 - Sleep Ventilation for Patients With Advanced Hypercapnic COPD N/A
Terminated NCT03284203 - Feasibility of At-Home Handheld Spirometry N/A
Recruiting NCT06110403 - Impact of Long-acting Bronchodilator- -Corticoid Inhaled Therapy on Ventilation, Lung Function and Breathlessness Phase 1/Phase 2
Active, not recruiting NCT06040424 - Comparison of Ipratropium / Levosalbutamol Fixed Dose Combination and Ipratropium and Levosalbutamol Free Dose Combination in pMDI Form in Stable Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Patients Phase 3
Recruiting NCT05865184 - Evaluation of Home-based Sensor System to Detect Health Decompensation in Elderly Patients With History of CHF or COPD
Recruiting NCT04868357 - Hypnosis for the Management of Anxiety and Breathlessness During a Pulmonary Rehabilitation Program N/A
Completed NCT01892566 - Using Mobile Health to Respond Early to Acute Exacerbations of COPD in HIV N/A
Completed NCT04119856 - Outgoing Lung Team - a Cross-sectorial Intervention in Patients With COPD N/A
Completed NCT04485741 - Strados System at Center of Excellence
Completed NCT03626519 - Effects of Menthol on Dyspnoea in COPD Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04860375 - Multidisciplinary Management of Severe COPD N/A