Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Background: Patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery often experience a range of problems and symptoms related to the procedure and the underlying heart disease.These problems include anxiety and depressive symptoms, immobility issues, complications such as wound seeping, neck and shoulder pains, interrupted and insufficient sleep. No studies have tested a combined intervention on phase 1 rehabilitation in coronary artery bypass graft surgery patients. However, randomised trials with either a physical or a mental part have been conducted with positive result, but evidence is lacking for a combined intervention. Before a large randomised trial was set up a pilot trial was conducted to evaluate the feasibility of patient recruitment and intervention: to test the safety and tolerability of the intervention by patients and to provide outcome data for sample size calculations. The SheppHeartCABG pilot showed trial feasibility, safety and sufficient inclusion rate and high compliance with most elements. Outcome data from the pilot trial has been used to sample size and power calculation in this randomised clinical trial.

Objective: The objective of this trial is to investigate the benefits and harms of a phase 1 comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation programme consisting of an exercise-training and a psycho-educative component, including plus treatment as usual in patients who undergo coronary artery bypass grafting.


Clinical Trial Description

Background: Patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting surgery often experience a range of problems and symptoms related to the procedure and the underlying heart disease. These problems include anxiety and depressive symptoms, immobility issues, complications such as wound seeping, neck and shoulder pains, interrupted and insufficient sleep. Over the last 2 decades, cardiac rehabilitation has become recognized as a significant component in the continuum of care for persons with cardiovascular disease. Furthermore, cardiac rehabilitation has undergone a significant evolution moving from a focused exercise intervention to a comprehensive disease management program. In Guidelines for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery cardiac rehabilitation is described as including early ambulation during hospitalisation and outpatient prescriptive exercise training beginning 6-8 weeks following surgery. Our hypothesis is that a comprehensive rehabilitation programme including physical exercise with moderate intensity and a psycho-educative component can begin in the early postoperative phase during hospitalising.

No studies have tested a combined intervention on phase 1 rehabilitation in coronary artery bypass graft surgery patients. However, randomised trials with either a physical or a mental part have been conducted with positive result, but evidence is lacking for a combined intervention. Before a large randomised trial was set up a pilot trial was conducted to evaluate the feasibility of patient recruitment and intervention: to test the safety and tolerability of the intervention by patients and to provide outcome data for sample size calculations. The SheppHeartCABG pilot showed trial feasibility, safety and sufficient inclusion rate and high compliance with most elements. Outcome data from the pilot trial has been used to sample size and power calculation in this randomised clinical trial.

Objective: The objective of this trial is to investigate the benefits and harms of a phase 1 comprehensive cardiac rehabilitation programme consisting of an exercise-training and a psycho-educative component, including plus treatment as usual in patients who undergo coronary artery bypass grafting.

Design: SheppHeartCABG is an investigator-initiated randomised clinical trial with 1:1 randomisation from two sites to a comprehensive physical and psycho-educative rehabilitation programme plus usual care or usual care alone, with blinded outcome assessment.

Population: Patients 18 years or older with ischaemic heart disease, who have to undergo elective coronary artery bypass grafting, who speak and understand Danish and who provide a written informed consent will be included. The following patients will be excluded from the trial: patients at intermediate or high risk to their cardiovascular status according to guidelines, patients with neurological or orthopaedic deficits which prevent training and patients who do not wish to participate.

Number of participants: 326 participants will be included.

Interventions: All patients - both in the intervention group and in the control group - receive usual care. Patients allocated to the experimental group receive a rehabilitation programme consisting of physical exercise and psycho-education. The control group will receive usual care alone. The physical exercises consist of; breathing exercises with and without using incentive spirometry with expiratory positive pressure airway, walking and cycling exercises and neck/shoulder exercises during hospitalisation and an exercise programme running from discharge until 4 weeks following surgery. The psycho-educative rehabilitation programme consists of four psycho-educative consultations with a specially trained nurse. The last consultation will take place 4 weeks following surgery.

Outcomes: Primary outcome is physical capacity measured by 6-minute walk test 4 weeks following surgery. Secondary outcomes; perceived mental and physical(SF 12), health-related quality of life (HeartQoL), anxiety and depression (HADS), sleep (PSQI), pain (ÖMPSQ) and leg endurance and strength (sit and stand test). Explorative outcomes are; fatigue (MFI-20), physical activity (IPAQ), cognitive and emotional representation of illness (B-IPQ) and self-rated health (EQ-5D).

Safety: There are no previous reports of risks associated with psycho-educational consultations. Physical exercise is tested extensively in patients with heart disease and is considered safe and will meet the applicable requirements for safety during training of cardiac patients. The interventions are considered safe for patients at low risk according to their cardiovascular status.

Ethical considerations: The trial is performed in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki in its latest form. All patients must give informed consent prior to participation and the trial is initiated after approval by the Danish Data Protection Agency and the regional ethics committee. The trial will be registered at www.clinicalTrials.gov before randomisation of the first participant. ;


Study Design

Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Health Services Research


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02290262
Study type Interventional
Source Rigshospitalet, Denmark
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 2014
Completion date August 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04097912 - Study to Gather Information to What Extent Patients Follow the Treatment Regimen of Low-dose Aspirin for Primary and Secondary Prevention of Diseases of the Heart and Blood Vessels
Completed NCT01941355 - Trial of Rehabilitation in Phase 1 After Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03603210 - Outcomes of Drug Coated Balloon Angioplasty, A UK Real Life Experience From 2009 to 2015
Completed NCT00151658 - Sirolimus Eluting Stents in Complex Coronary Lesions (SCANDSTENT) N/A
Recruiting NCT04193475 - Machine Learning in Quantitative Stress Echocardiography
Active, not recruiting NCT03736018 - Randomised Controlled Trial to Assess Whether Computed Tomography Cardiac Angiography Can Improve Invasive Coronary Angiography in Bypass Surgery Patients N/A
Completed NCT02849067 - Hemodynamic Responses of Stable Ischemic Heart Disease Patients to a Comedy Session N/A
Recruiting NCT05045118 - The Impact of Structured Patient Education Material (SPEM) in Improving Clinical and Behavioural Outcomes in Home-based Cardiac Rehabilitation Program Participants: A Pilot Study N/A
Completed NCT04901767 - Coronary Artery Endothelial Dysfunction With Drug Coated Balloons
Enrolling by invitation NCT03674255 - Echocardiography: Value and Accuracy at REst and STress
Active, not recruiting NCT03171311 - The OCTOBER Trial - European Trial on Optical Coherence Tomography Optimized Bifurcation Event Reduction (OCTOBER) N/A
Recruiting NCT04768283 - Cardiac Rehabilitation and Additional Physical Training in Elderly Patients After Acute Coronary Syndrome N/A
Completed NCT02315001 - Liraglutide to Improve corONary Haemodynamics During Exercise streSS Phase 2
Completed NCT01796353 - Effects of a Comprehensive Sexual Rehabilitation Programme in Heart Patients N/A
Recruiting NCT04061525 - Motion and IntraCoronary Ecg Ischemia Development Study (MICE)
Recruiting NCT04674449 - iCorMicA - Stratified Medicine in Angina N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT02623140 - BIOFREEDOM Stent Versus ORSIRO Stent: SORT OUT IX Phase 4
Completed NCT03646097 - Impact of Real-time Angiographic Co-registered OCT on PCI Results - the OPTICO-integration II Study N/A
Completed NCT02053818 - Remifentanil/Sufentanil for CABG+/-AVR Evaluated by Recovery, Cognitive Function, Haemodynamics and Biochemical Markers. Phase 4
Recruiting NCT04014140 - iFR Guided Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Surgery