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A remote monitoring-enabled home exercise prescription for patients with interstitial lung disease at risk for exercise-induced desaturation - 31/10/23

Doi : 10.1016/j.rmed.2023.107397 
Claire E. Child a , Morgan L. Kelly a , Haley Sizelove a , Marissa Garvin a , Julia Guilliams a , Paul Kim a , Haotian D. Cai a , SiWei Luo a , Kevin J. McQuade a , Erik R. Swenson b, c , Amanda T. Wise a , Ylinne T. Lynch c , Lawrence A. Ho c , Mary Beth Brown a,
a University of Washington, Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Division of Physical Therapy, USA 
b Medical Service, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, USA 
c University of Washington, Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, USA 

Corresponding author. Health Sciences Building BB-826, Box 356490, 1607 NE Pacific St. Seattle, WA, 98195, USA.Health Sciences Building BB-826Box 3564901607 NE Pacific StSeattleWA98195USA

Abstract

Rationale

Alternatives to center-based pulmonary rehabilitation are needed to improve patient access to this important therapy. A critical challenge to overcome is how to maximize safety of unsupervised exercise for at-risk patients. We investigated if a novel remote monitoring-enabled mobile health (mHealth) program is safe, feasible, and effective for patients who experience exercise-induced hemoglobin desaturation.

Methods

An interstitial lung disease (ILD) commonly associated with pronounced exercise desaturation was investigated - the rare, female-predominant ILD lymphangioleiomyomatosis (LAM). Over a 12-week program, hemoglobin saturation (SpO2) was continuously recorded during all home exercise sessions. Intervention effects were assessed with 6-min walk test (6MWT), maximal cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET), lower extremity computerized dynamometry, pulmonary function tests, and health-related quality of life (QoL) surveys. Safety was assessed by blood biomarkers of systemic inflammation and cardiac wall stress, and incidence of adverse events.

Results

Fifteen LAM patients enrolled and 14 completed the intervention, with high adherence to aerobic (87 ± 15%) and strength (87 ± 12%) training components. An innovative characterization of exercise training SpO2 revealed that while mild-to-moderate desaturation was common during home workouts, participants were able to self-adjust exercise intensity and supplemental oxygen levels to maintain recommended exercise parameters. Significant improvements included 6MWT distance (+36 ± 34 m, p = 0.003), CPET time (p = 0.04), muscular endurance (p = 0.008), QoL (p = 0.009 to 0.03), and fatigue (p = 0.001 to 0.03). Patient acceptability and satisfaction indicators were high, blood biomarkers remained stable (p > 0.05), and no study-related adverse events occurred.

Conclusion

A remote monitoring-enabled home exercise program is a safe, feasible, and effective approach even for patients who experience exercise desaturation.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Highlights

Patients with interstitial lung disease can safely exercise using remote monitoring.
Home exercise program adherence, acceptability and satisfaction were high.
Patients can self-adjust intensity and oxygen delivery to follow target parameters.
Mild-to-moderate desaturation is common during workouts, without evidence of harm.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Plan


 This work was funded by a Patient Benefit Grant (LAM0130PB07-18) from The LAM Foundation. Funders provided no input or contributions in the development of the research and manuscript.
☆☆ This article has an online supplement, which is accessible from this issue's table of contents online.


© 2023  The Authors. Publié par Elsevier Masson SAS. Tous droits réservés.
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Vol 218

Article 107397- novembre 2023 Retour au numéro
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