Aortic Aneurysm Clinical Trial
Official title:
Maximising Recovery to Health Through Trimodal (Bio Psycho Social) Prehabilitation for Aneurysm Surgery Study
DESIGN: Single-centre, feasibility study AIMS: The aim of this study is to evaluate the
acceptability and pre-operative impact on functional capacity of a trimodal prehabilitation
program in a cohort of patients undergoing aneurysm repair.
This will enable the design (feasibility and power) of a large scale Randomised Controlled
Trial.
Expected outcomes
- The potential number of patients who would benefit, the compliance and acceptability of
a pre-operative prehabilitation programme will be calculated.
- Preoperatively, expected at 6-weeks, the change in physical fitness of patients
(assessed by the physical function section of SF-36 and measured with peak flow/6-minute
walk testing) during the pre-operative phase will be assessed in both groups.
- The effects on quality of life, anxiety and depression on each study participant will be
assessed immediately pre-op, expected at 6-weeks.
- The number of patients who are able to reduce or cease smoking will be reported during
the pre-op phase (expected at 6 weeks), as will length of hospital stay after aortic
surgery, expected at 6-8 weeks.
POPULATION: Patients undergoing planned elective aortic surgery procedures
ELIGIBILITY: Adult patients (over 18 years) undergoing elective open and endovascular
aneurysm repair with capacity to consent and physical fitness to undergo an pre-operative
exercise programme DURATION: 1 year from 1st June 2014
Proposed intervention - The introduction of a biopsychosocial intervention before surgery.
The physical exercise programme will be a prescribed exercise training twice per week which
will be supported by a physical therapist and vascular nurse specialist. A trained clinical
psychologist will also deliver a brief psychological intervention based on cognitive
behavioural therapy (CBT) techniques in two sessions to modify illness, surgical preparation
and rehabilitation beliefs. Lastly patients will be counselled and referred to smoking
cessation services as appropriate by the vascular nurse specialist.
Baseline information will include patient demographics and medical history, quality of life
assessment using SF-36 forms, hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS) and exercise
testing by a standardised 6-minute walk test Information immediately pre-operatively will be
collected to include a repeat assessment of physical function with a 6-minute walk test,
SF-36 assessment and HADS scores. Smoking cessation rate will be collected.
A pre and post-intervention group will be studied over a 1-year period. We will report on the
eligibility, acceptability and pre-operative effect of this trimodal rehabilitation
programme.
AIM AND EXPECTED IMPACT
This is a non-randomised pre-post intervention pilot study to understand the acceptability
and pre-operative effects of a combined physical, psychological and social prehabilitation
package in patients undergoing aneurysm repair. This will enable the design (feasibility and
power) of a large scale Randomised Controlled Trial.
Our hypotheses include:
- The introduction of a prehabilitation programme will be acceptable to the majority of
patients undergoing aneurysm surgery
- A physical pre-operative exercise programme will increase physical fitness before
surgery
- A psychological intervention based on cognitive behaviour therapy techniques will reduce
anxiety before surgery and prepare patients better for their post-operative recovery
- The introduction of psycho-social counselling for smoking cessation will encourage more
patients to give up smoking pre-operatively
PARTICIPANT ENTRY: PATIENTS
PRE-REGISTRATION EVALUATIONS The research team will identify eligible patients for
recruitment into the study via clinic lists, multidisciplinary meetings and referral letters
before the patient attends their clinic appointment. Only adult patients undergoing aortic
surgery will be selected. Patient information leaflets will be given to selected patients and
patients will be given the opportunity to read them and ask questions before deciding whether
or not to participate.
INCLUSION CRITERIA
- Adult patients (>18 years old) undergoing aortic aneurysm repair.
- Ability to comprehend and retain instructions regarding self-training
- Physical fitness allowing participation in an exercise programme.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA
- Minors (<18 years old)
- Adult patients who do not have capacity to consent.
- Emergency or urgent procedures who will not have a necessary 6 week lead in time until
operation.
WITHDRAWRAL CRITERIA The patient will be made aware that they may withdraw from the study at
any time without providing a reason; their care and treatment will not be affected
STUDY DESIGN The acceptability of this programme will be studied and the pre-operative impact
on functional capacity will be assessed in a comparator (pre-intervention) and
post-intervention group.
Patients
Patients from Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust Vascular Unit undergoing aortic aneurysm
repair will be recruited.
Study Protocol
Our current vascular pre-operative assessment service is an established nurse led service,
run by a dedicated aortic clinical nurse specialist. The prehabilitation would run in
conjunction with the current pre-operative screening measures currently in place - which
include dobutamine stress echocardiography, renal assessment and pulmonary function tests.
-Phase 1 - Comparator (pre-intervention) evaluation
Patients undergoing present standard of care - i.e. standard work-up for aneurysm repair
without nurse-led prehabilitation strategy, who meet inclusion and exclusion criteria will be
given a patient information leaflet, informed they are in the pre-intervention group and
consented for inclusion in the study as detailed above.
At the baseline appointment, on the same day as work-up tests, information will be collected
on standardised data collection sheets to include:
- Patient demographics and medical history
- Baseline Quality of Life assessment using SF-36 forms
- Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS).
- Exercise testing by a standardised 6-minute walk test
- Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR)
Information immediately pre-operatively will be collected the day before operation (our
standard admission is the day before) to include a repeat assessment of physical function
with a 6-minute walk test, Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR), SF-36 assessment and HADS
scores. Smoking cessation rate over the pre-operative period will be collected. The aneurysm
repair will proceed as standard of care, and will be unchanged from standard practice.
-Phase 2 - Intervention
Proposed intervention - The introduction of a biopsychosocial intervention before surgery.
The physical exercise programme will be prescribed exercise training twice per week which
will be supported by our vascular nurse specialist, previously shown to have a small effect
on length of stay in cardiac patients [12].
A trained specialist (a registered psychologist) will also deliver a brief psychological
intervention based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) techniques in two sessions to modify
illness, surgical preparation and rehabilitation beliefs. This psychological intervention has
been shown to be effective in encouraging claudicants to initiate and continue exercise
training [13].
Lastly patients will be counselled and referred to smoking cessation services as appropriate.
Phase 2 protocol - During an initial set-up phase comprehensive information booklets will be
developed to instruct the patient on these three modes of prehabilitation.
Patients who are eligible for the study will be approached in the same way as patients
studied in the comparator group. At the baseline study visit, the same baseline information
will be collected as for the comparator group i.e.:
At the baseline appointment, on the same day as work-up tests, information will be collected
on standardised data collection sheets to include:
- Patient demographics and medical history
- Baseline Quality of Life assessment using SF-36 forms
- Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS).
- Exercise testing by a standardised 6-minute walk test
- Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR)
In addition patients will receive:
- Information booklets
- Physical exercise plan, run-through and explanations.
- Psychological therapy on this day or a mutually convenient day for patient and
therapist.
- Counselling by the nurse specialist and referral for smoking cessation
Patients will receive a telephone follow-up with the nurse specialist at week 2 and week 4 to
evaluate progress and to encourage compliance with the programme. Between weeks 5-6 the
patient will have a further session with the clinical psychologist, just prior to admission
for treatment, to prepare them for their impending hospitalisation.
Again, information immediately pre-operatively will be collected to include a repeat
assessment of physical function with a 6-minute walk test, Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR),
SF-36 assessment and HADS score. In addition, patients will be asked to fill out a
questionnaire assessing compliance with and acceptability of the prehabilitation programme.
Smoking cessation rate will be collected.
Data Collection
The following demographic data will be recorded on standardised data collection forms for
each patient, collected from patient records and the patient interviews:
- Inclusion and exclusion criteria
- Medical history/risk factors
- ASA classification
- Planned operative procedure details
- Physical status using functional capacity, measured in metabolic equivalents (METs),
with a Duke Activity Status Index (score of less than 4 indicates poor physical
function).
Functional capacity may be usually expressed in metabolic equivalents (METs), where one MET
is defined as the oxygen consumption of a 70-kg man at rest. Greater than 7 METs of activity
tolerance is considered excellent, whereas less than 4 METs is considered poor activity
tolerance.
The Duke Activity Status Index suggests questions that correlate with MET levels; for
example, walking on level ground at about 4 miles per hour or carrying a bag of groceries up
a flight of stairs expends approximately 4 METs of activity. This system is used by the
Cleveland clinic for pre-operative cardiac evaluation. It allows a pre-operative assessment
of physical function to assess predicted ability to cope at home after surgery. A brief,
self-completed questionnaire (Appendix 1) can provide a standardized assessment of functional
status that correlates well with an objective measure of maximal exercise capacity [14].
Post-operative data will be collected for patients in order to plan for a further study based
on reducing length of stay.
- Inpatient complications: grade and details using standardised data collection sheets
- Length of stay
- HDU/ITU use
- Mortality
At base line visit and prior to operation each patient will be assessed using:
- Baseline Quality of Life assessment using SF-36 forms
- Hospital anxiety and depression scale (HADS).
- Exercise testing by a standardised 6-minute walk test
- Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR)
An event log will be recorded for each patient throughout the study period.
Patients undergoing intervention will be asked to complete a short questionnaire on
compliance and acceptability of the prehabilitation programme.
ANALYSIS Completed data collection sheets will be analysed for omissions and missing data
completed before being logged onto a central database and analysed by the research team at
Imperial College, London, St. Mary's Campus.
The two groups will be compared using simple statistical methods. We intend to analyse and
report on the following
- The number of patients who accepted inclusion into a pre-operative prehabilitation
programme will be calculated.
- The change in physical fitness of patients (assessed by the physical function section of
SF-36 and measured with peak flow/6-minute walk testing) during the pre-operative phase
will be assessed pre and post-intervention groups.
- The effects on quality of life.
- The effect of a programme on anxiety and depression on each study participant will be
assessed.
- The number of patients who are able to reduce or cease smoking will be reported.
- Compliance and acceptability of the prehabilitation programme.
- Morbidity and Mortality, HDU/ITU resource use as well as Length of hospital stay after
aortic surgery.
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