Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT04056416 |
Other study ID # |
Pro00057730 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
March 25, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
November 9, 2022 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2022 |
Source |
University of Alberta |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Single ventricular (SV) heart was a uniformly fatal condition before the advances in surgical
treatment in 1980. In the present era, 5-year survival rate with SV is 75%, with some
centers, including the Stollery Children's Hospital reporting higher survival. Although
mortality remains a major concern, the research focus has shifted to management of late
complications as well as improving patient physical and mental health related quality of life
issues. Children with SV have reduced exercise tolerance and this is progressive through
adulthood. Recent advances in remote health assessment and telehealth systems have allowed
the development of medically supervised home graduated physical training for adult cardiac
patient rehabilitation. To our knowledge, the application of these technologies has not been
applied to SV patients. The long term goal is to use this technology to improve patient
exercise capacity and to positively influence parental and patient perceptions of the
patient's physical ability.
Description:
Children with single ventricular (SV) heart were a uniformly fatal condition prior to
descriptions of surgical palliation in 1980 that results in a Fontan circulation with single
ventricle physiology. In the present era, 5-year survival is 75% in multicenter studies, with
some centers including the Stollery Children's Hospital reporting higher survival. Although
mortality remains a challenge for this population, the research focus has shifted towards
optimizing management of late complications as well as improving patient physical and mental
health-related quality of life issues. Children with SV have decreased exercise tolerance and
the reduction is progressive through adolescence and into adulthood. Physical factors
contributing to decreased exercise tolerance in the Fontan patient include cardiovascular
inefficiencies and the loss of peripheral lean muscle mass and efficiency from
deconditioning. Recently, Cordina et al. has shown that an intensive exercise regiment can
improve muscle strength and mass, cardiac output and exercise capacity in adults with Fontan
circulation. The majority of published outcomes from exercise training in patients with
congenital heart disease (CHD) have resulted in increased measured exercise capacity with no
apparent negative effect. Although the link between improved exercise capacity and improved
patient quality of life remains controversial, participation in an aerobic exercise regimen
leads to improved health-related quality of life.
Aside from physical limitations to their exercise capacity, Fontan patient self-confidence
toward physical activity is low, as is exercise participation. Studies indicate that amongst
youth with CHD, low self-confidence may be a more important predictor of participation than
the severity of the disease. Parental overprotection is a common finding in children with CHD
with a lasting impact on patient self-confidence and anxieties toward physical activity well
into adulthood. Alteration of patient and parental perception and anxieties toward
participation in physical activity may improve compliance to exercise training and encourage
more positive patient perceptions toward healthy lifestyle habits, including frequent
physical activity participation.
Recent technological advances in remote health assessment capabilities and telehealth systems
have allowed the development of medically supervised home graduated physical training for
adult cardiac patient rehabilitation. The application of such technologies to pediatric
congenital heart patients has not been tested. In collaboration with Prof. Boulanger at the
Advanced Man Machine Interface Laboratory at the University of Alberta, a custom pediatric
remote bike ergometer (MedBike) was developed. This technology provides the medical
supervisor with a live-feed of patient video/audio, electrocardiograph (ECG), blood pressure
(BP) and blood oximetry signals while enabling remote determination of patient work load
through the bike ergometer. The long-term goal is to use this technology to improve patient
exercise capacity and to positively influence patient and parental perceptions of the
patient's physical ability.
Stage 2 (HIIT exercise program): The investigators will evaluate the safety and efficacy of
an 8-week, 3 times per week supervised HIIT exercise program in patients with SV physiology.
All eligible patients will undergo a full cardio pulmonary exercise testing (CPET) and
anthropometry assessment of lean muscle mass prior to exercise training and at the end of the
training period. Understanding that a patient's CPET results may change over time, subjects
who participated in Stage 1 of the study will be invited back to undergo a new baseline CPET
to ensure the reliability of the data.
A MedBike will be installed in the participant's home. Members of the MedBike team at the
University of Alberta will be responsible for installation, set-up, and training with regards
to participant use of the MedBike. Installation, set-up, and training will occur at a time
that is convenient for the participant and their caregivers. The patients will exercise in
the convenience of their home with tele-health link that includes a live video and audio feed
to the supervisor workstation at the University of Alberta. The HIIT program described above
will be applied. The supervisor will have the ability to modify the program intensity during
each session based on the perceived difficulty or ease of it and the results of the baseline
CPET. The exercise sessions in their home will be also be supervised in-person by the
patient's caregiver. Given that no adverse events or safety concerns arose in Stage 1B of the
study, the patient will be supervised remotely by a member of the MedBike team capable of
reading ECG data. The investigators will document any adverse effects from the 240 training
sessions during the study.
Exercise sessions will be based on standardized guidelines for aerobic exercise (ACSM's
guidelines for exercise testing and prescription 2013). Heart rate, ECG, oxygen saturation
and rating of perceived exertion will be monitored during each session.
Any adverse events such as profound desaturation (oxygen saturations fall of > 10% points for
greater than 1 min, chest pain and ECG changes consistent with ischemia (ST depression or
elevation in 2 consecutive leads), development of tachyarrhythmia (atrial or ventricular) and
any bike injury, will result in immediate stoppage of exercise regimen and evaluation by the
remote supervisor with access to medical personnel..
The impact of the exercise program on patient and parental perceptions of the patient's
physical capacity will be evaluated using qualitative methods, as well as health related
quality of life questionnaires. Patient and parents will be interviewed prior to, and at the
end of, the exercise training as to their perceptions of the influence of physical activity
in the presence of complex CHD.