Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Design, Implementation and Evaluation of a Reduced Cardiac Rehabilitation Program
Standard cardiac rehabilitation programs (sCRP) aim to improve risk factors for heart
disease such as high blood pressure, weight control, exercise and diet in order to decrease
the chances of having heart problems in the future. These programs decrease morbidity and
mortality but face important challenges: 1) Long waiting lists to participate in these
programs. For example, St. Paul's Hospital has an intake capacity of 480 patients per year.
Patients usually wait one to three months to start the program. 2) There is a vast
heterogeneity of patients within the same program, from those that have never experienced
heart problems to those that have already had a heart attack, chest pain or stroke.
Therefore, patients with different medical problems receive the same treatment. 3)
Facilities can be inconveniently located which leads to transportation difficulties, 4) The
program is time consuming and classes are held in working times, 5) Shortly after
completion, patients seem to lose what they have gained in the program. These caveats need
to be addressed to improve the efficacy, delivery and capacity of sCRP for the increasing
population of patients with heart disease.
The investigators want to compare a reduced cardiac rehabilitation program (rCRP) with the
standard cardiac rehabilitation program (sCRP) in patients with risk factors for heart
disease as well as patients that already suffer from this condition, including those at
higher risk. The rCRP will offer the same services as the sCRP; the only difference is the
number of hospital based exercise sessions. While the sCRP offers 32 hospital based
supervised exercise sessions, the rCRP will offer 10 hospital based exercise sessions. The
rCRP would be a 'middle of the road alternative program' that would have the benefits of a
hospital based program and the flexibility of a home based intervention. The rCRP would
offer an alternative for patients that do not need constant supervision and would allow the
sCRP health care team to focus on those patients who have more serious heart conditions. The
rCRP would be a unique intervention because it integrates a less intensive cardiac
rehabilitation into the pre-existing sCRP model. This alternative would help overcome the
caveats of standard cardiac rehabilitation programs.
This study is a two group randomized controlled trial, non-inferiority design, where the
rCRP (intervention group) will be compared with the sCRP (control group). Eligible patients
will be asked to participate in the study at the cardiac rehabilitation program intake
clinic. Consenting participants will be asked to sign an informed consent and undergo a
baseline assessment. This assessment will consist of a medical history, exercise capacity
(stress test), blood test, blood pressure, anthropometric measurements, lifestyle behaviours
and psychosocial measurements. The baseline assessment will be done before participants
start the program. Consecutively, randomization will take place stratified according to
gender to either the sCRP or rCRP. The same assessment called exit assessment will be
performed at four to six months from baseline, at the cardiac rehabilitation program exit
clinic (at program completion) and at 16 to 20 months from baseline (one year follow-up from
cardiac rehabilitation program completion) to assess the immediate and sustainable effect,
respectively.
The following research questions will be addressed:
1. Is the reduced cardiac rehabilitation program (intervention group) as effective as the
standard cardiac rehabilitation program (control group) for improving exercise capacity
and ischemic heart disease risk factors at both program completion (four to six months
from baseline) and at one year from program completion (16 to 20 months from baseline)?
2. Will the reduced cardiac rehabilitation program have better adherence than the standard
cardiac rehabilitation program?
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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