A Randomized Controlled Trial of an Exercise Maintenance Intervention in Men and Women After Cardiac Rehabilitation (ECO-PCR Trial)

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Date

2021-05

Authors

Reid, Robert D.
Wooding, Evyanne A.
Blanchard, Chris M
Moghei, Mahshid
Harris, Jennifer
Mullen, Kerri
Lima de Melo Ghisi, Gabriela
Krahn, Murray
Chessex, Caroline
Pipe, Andrew

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Canadian Journal of Cardiology

Abstract

Background Exercise maintenance interventions are needed for cardiac rehabilitation (CR) graduates to maintain moderate and vigorous-intensity physical activity (MVPA). We tested an exercise facilitator intervention (EFI) to promote exercise maintenance compared with usual care (UC) separately in men and women. Methods This was a 3-site, randomized (1:1), parallel-group, superiority trial (ECO-PCR). CR graduates were stratified by site and sex and randomly allocated (concealed). EFI participants received a face-to-face introductory session, 5 small-group counseling teleconferences, and 3 personal calls from a trained facilitator over 50 weeks. In-person assessments were undertaken at baseline and 26 and 52 weeks after randomization. The primary outcome was weekly minutes of MVPA, measured by accelerometer. Secondary outcomes were exercise capacity, risk factors, quality of life, and enrollment in community-based exercise programs. Effects were tested with the use of linear mixed models. Results A total of 449 CR graduates (135 women, 314 men) were randomised (n = 226 EFI, n = 223 UC). In the intention-to-treat analysis for men and for women, there were no significant effects for treatment or time on MVPA. In a planned secondary analysis that considered only those adherent to EFI (completed ≥ 66% of sessions; per-protocol), bouted MVPA (ie, in sustained bouts of ≥ 10 min) was higher in women in the EFI group (mean = 132.6 ± 135.2 min/wk at 52 weeks) compared with UC (111.8 ± 113.1; P = 0.013). Regarding secondary outcomes, in women, a treatment group main effect was observed for blood pressure (P = 0.011) and exercise capacity (P = 0.019; both per-protocol) favouring EFI; no other differences were observed. Conclusions In this trial of CR completers, an EFI showed promise for women, but was ineffective in men.

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Keywords

Coronary disease, Exercise, Physical activity, Cardiac rehabilitation, Maintenance, Behavioral

Citation

Reid, R. D., Wooding, E. A., Blanchard, C. M., Moghei, M., Harris, J., Proulx, G.-A., Prince, S. A., Mullen, K. A., Ghisi, G. M., Krahn, M., Chessex, C., Pipe, A. L., Mark, A. E., & Grace, S. L. (2021). A Randomized Controlled Trial of an Exercise Maintenance Intervention in Men and Women After Cardiac Rehabilitation (ECO-PCR Trial). Canadian Journal of Cardiology, 37(5), 794–802. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cjca.2020.10.015