Coronary Heart Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Enhancing Standard Cardiac Rehabilitation With Stress Management Training in Patients With Heart Disease
The purpose of this study is to assess the extent to which combining exercise and stress management training (SMT) is more effective at improving biomarkers in vulnerable cardiac patients compared to exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation alone.
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of death in the United States and in
roughly half the cases its first clinical manifestations, myocardial infarction (MI) or
sudden cardiac death (SCD), are fatal. There is considerable evidence that "stress" plays a
significant and independent role in the occurrence of CHD and its complications. This
evidence has provided the rationale for developing interventional strategies to reduce stress
in susceptible individuals in order to modify the natural history of these clinical events.
There are now promising data to suggest that stress management training (SMT) is one such
approach, and that SMT can have beneficial effects on psychosocial and medical outcomes.
However, many of the randomized clinical trials (RCTs) employing stress management approaches
in CHD patients have had important methodological limitations and several of the larger RCTs
have failed to demonstrate a benefit for SMT over usual care, raising questions about the
value of SMT for patients with CHD. Reliance on "hard" clinical endpoints is problematic
because studies require such large sample sizes that they are logistically difficult to
conduct and are prohibitively expensive. The use of intermediate pathophysiologic endpoints
that have been shown independently to be associated with increased risk represents a novel
and exciting opportunity to examine the added value of SMT in exercise-based cardiac
rehabilitation (CR) compared to CR without SMT on key biomarkers of risk in vulnerable CHD
patients.
This 12-week study will enroll adults with stable CHD who are eligible for CR. Participants
will be randomly assigned to either standard cardiac rehabilitation or standard cardiac
rehabilitation enhanced with weekly SMT. Prior to randomization, medical screening,
standardized psychosocial questionnaires, mental stress testing, assessment of diet and
physical activity, and exercise testing will be conducted. Additional biomarkers of risk will
be assessed through measures of flow-mediated vasodilation, inflammation, platelet function,
stress hormones, baroreflex, and heart rate variability.
Participants assigned to CR alone will engage in supervised exercise routines 3 times per
week. Participants will be encouraged to maintain consistent exercise duration and effort
throughout each session. Participants assigned to CR enhanced with SMT will engage in
standard exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation and also receive weekly group SMT. At the
conclusion of the 12-week intervention, participants will return for repeat assessments of
stress and biomarker measures. At 6 months, 12 months, and annually up to 4 years
participants will be contacted for information regarding major adverse cardiovascular events,
other medical events and medication use.
Additionally a group of age, gender, and disease matched cardiac patients referred to CR,
during the same time interval, but who elected not to participate in CR will form a
non-randomized comparison group for cardiac events.
Overall, 164 participants were consented for study participation at Duke University Medical
Center. Of these, 151 participants were randomized to either Standard Cardiac Rehabilitation
or Enhanced Cardiac Rehabilitation. Post-intervention assessments were completed on 145
participants; 151 participants were available for intention-to-treat analysis.
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