Chronic disease self-management and exercise in COPD as pulmonary rehabilitation: a randomized controlled trial
Patients and Methods: Adult outpatients with COPD were randomized to the CDSMP with or without one hour of weekly supervised exercise over 6 weeks. The primary outcome measure was 6-minute walk test distance (6MWD). Secondary outcomes included self-reported exercise, exercise stage of change, exercise self-efficacy, breathlessness, quality of life, and self-management behaviors. Within- and between-group differences were analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis.
Results: Of 84 subjects recruited, 15 withdrew. 6MWD increased similarly in both groups: CDSMP-plus-exercise (intervention group) by 18.6 ± 46.2 m; CDSMP-alone (control group) by 20.0 ± 46.2 m. There was no significant difference for any secondary outcome.
Conclusion: The CDSMP produced à small statistically significant increase in 6MWD. The addition of a single supervised exercise session did not further increase exercise capacity. Our findings confirm the efficacy of a behaviorally based intervention in COPD, but this would seem to be less than expected from conventional exercise-based pulmonary rehabilitation, raising the question of how, if at all, the small gains observed in this study may be augmented.
History
Publication title
The International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseVolume
9Pagination
513-523ISSN
1176-9106Department/School
Tasmanian School of MedicinePublisher
Dove Medical Press Ltd.Place of publication
New ZealandRights statement
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 United States (CC BY-NC 3.0 US) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/Repository Status
- Open