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Chronic pulmonary hypertension (PH) is associated with impaired exercise capacity, quality of life and right ventricular function. The disease is characterized by an increase of pulmonary vascular resistance and pulmonary arterial pressure, leading to right heart insufficiency.
Despite optimized combination-medical therapy most patients remain symptomatic, have reduced exercise capacity, quality of life and reduced survival rates, with an annual mortality rate of approximately 5 -15 % or even higher.
Previous training studies have suggested that exercise training as add-on to medical treatment is highly effective improving exercise capacity, quality of life and symptoms.
The current guidelines recommend exercise training only in specialized centres including both PH and rehabilitation specialists who are experienced in exercise training of severely compromised patients.
A specialized PH-training program has been performed in Heidelberg since 2003 including >1200 patients with various forms of chronic PH. The exercise training program is performed in a special setting with an in-hospital start of the rehabilitation program. It is characterized by a low-dose closely supervised exercise training in small groups with additional psychological support and mental training.
This training program for patients with PH will be implemented in European centers to add exercise training to the existing PH therapies. The effect of the training on physical exercise capacity will be assessed by 6-minute walking distance (6-MWD). Further clinical parameters will be assessed to evaluate the effect on exercise capacity, quality of life and symptoms.
The aim of this study is to guide European PH-centers to become specialized centers for training in PH.
126 patients will be included, who either receive exercise training or continue their daily sedentary life style (1:1 randomization) for 15 weeks.
As inpatient settings are not available in all healthcare systems the training program will be adapted from the specific training program for PH patients developed in Heidelberg to a procedure, which is feasible in the local participating centres. Another objective of this study is to assess if the particular adopted training program specified for each participating centre and country is still safe and effective.
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is defined as a mean pulmonary arterial pressure ≥25 mmHg. PH is often diagnosed at an advanced stage (WHO functional class III-IV) with a massive increase of the mean pulmonary arterial pressure. A crucial parameter determining the symptoms and prognosis of the patients is the cardiac reserve. This parameter is defined by the pulmonary vascular resistance and the right ventricular adaptation. Severe PH is characterized by a decreased cardiac output at rest, an increased afterload and consecutive cor pulmonale.
Within the last years there has been a huge progress in the scientific fields of genetics, pathogenesis, pathophysiology and therapy of PH. This has also been documented in the PH world conferences. New disease-targeted medication has been developed such as endothelin receptor antagonists (bosentan, ambrisentan, sitaxentan, macitentan), prostacyclin derivates (inhaled and intravenous iloprost, epoprostenol, treprostinil), phosphodiesterase-5-inhibitors (sildenafil, tadalafil) and the soluble guanylate cyclase inhibitor riociguat. Despite these advances in treatment, the disease may not be treated causally or even be cured. In most cases however, disease progression may be slowed down. The use of PH-targeted treatment and supporting therapies such as anticoagulation and diuretics improve the symptoms and impede the progression of the disease. Nevertheless, the prognosis of the patients remains impaired. The first randomized controlled study investigating the effect of exercise training in PH showed a significant improvement of exercise capacity and quality of life. Further uncontrolled trials using a low-dose exercise and respiratory therapy in different etiologies of PH showed an improvement in exercise capacity, quality of life, muscle function and further prognostic parameters. A recent randomized controlled study could support these findings. Studies also showed an improvement in muscle capillarization of the quadriceps muscle.
The training program consists of interval ergometer training, respiratory therapy, muscle training and mental gait training. The interval ergometer training allows performing aerobic exercise training with a low cardio-circulatory stress. In patients with left heart insufficiency, this training has been successfully implemented. Respiratory therapy has been established in the rehabilitation of patients with lung disease within the last years. The different techniques aim to improve ventilation, strengthen the respiratory muscles, mobilize the thorax and enhance secretolysis. The training program also contains mental (gait) training. This training was adapted from mental imagery techniques used by sport psychologists in professional athletes. Mental imagery techniques have shown to improve physical and cognitive functions.
Due to the beneficial results, exercise training and rehabilitation has received a 1A recommendation at the PH world symposium in Nice in 2013. This decision was mainly based on three randomized controlled trials that investigated a limited number of patients. To unequivocally demonstrate safety and positive effects of exercise training in different settings large multicenter RCTs are essential. An exercise program has not yet been implemented in most European countries, partly due to limited access to rehabilitation programs and institutions.
The aim of this large, multicenter, prospective, randomized controlled trial is to investigate the effect of exercise training and rehabilitation on physical exercise capacity across different European countries. Physical exercise capacity will be measured by exercise induced change of 6-minute walking distance (6-MWD) compared to baseline and the control group without training. As inpatient settings are not available in all healthcare systems the training program will be adapted from the specific training program for PH patients developed in Heidelberg in a system, which is feasible for the local participating centres. Another objective of this study is to assess if the adopted training program specified for each participating centre and country is still safe and effective.
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| Label | Type | Description | Intervention Names |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control group | No Intervention | Patients in this group continue their sedentary life-style throughout the study period. Patients will be advised to perform no specific exercise training during the trial. After 15 weeks, the patients are offered to take part in the training program as well. | |
| Training group | Experimental | Standard rehabilitation therapy includes dietary measures, massages and relaxation techniques. Additionally, patients perform exercise and respiratory therapy and mental gait training. Patients will be informed about group allocation. |
|
| Name | Type | Description | Arm Group Labels | Other Names |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exercise training | Other | The rehabilitation program comprises interval ergometer training, dumbbell training, respiratory therapy, mental training and guided walks for 5-7 times/week. |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| 6 MWD | Change in 6-MWD between baseline and 15 weeks in the training vs. the control Group; meters | 15 weeks |
| Measure | Description | Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
| Change in WHO functional class in training vs. control group | WHO functional class | 15 weeks |
| Change in Quality of life in training vs. control group | Quality of life (SF-36) |
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Inclusion Criteria:
Female and male patients of any ethnic origin ≥ 18 years
WHO functional class II-IV
PH diagnosed by right heart catheter showing:
Patients receiving optimized conventional PH therapy including intensified treatment with diuretics and who have been stable for 2 months before entering the study
Except for diuretics, medical treatment should not be expected to change during the entire 15-week study period
Negative pregnancy test (β-HCG) at the start of the trial and appropriate contraception throughout the study for women with child-bearing potential
Able to understand and willing to sign the Informed Consent Form
Exclusion Criteria:
Additional exclusion criteria for MRI (optional)
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| Name | Affiliation | Role |
|---|---|---|
| Ekkehard Grünig, MD | Centre for pulmonary hypertension of the Thoraxclinic at the University Hospital Heidelberg | Principal Investigator |
| Facility | Status | City | State | ZIP | Country | Contacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Centre for pulmonary hypertension of the Thoraxclinic at the University Hospital Heidelberg | Heidelberg | 69126 | Germany |
| PubMed Identifier | Type | Citation | Retractions |
|---|---|---|---|
| 16982941 | Background | Mereles D, Ehlken N, Kreuscher S, Ghofrani S, Hoeper MM, Halank M, Meyer FJ, Karger G, Buss J, Juenger J, Holzapfel N, Opitz C, Winkler J, Herth FF, Wilkens H, Katus HA, Olschewski H, Grunig E. Exercise and respiratory training improve exercise capacity and quality of life in patients with severe chronic pulmonary hypertension. Circulation. 2006 Oct 3;114(14):1482-9. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.106.618397. Epub 2006 Sep 18. | |
| 21311162 |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D006976 | Hypertension, Pulmonary |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D008171 | Lung Diseases |
| D012140 | Respiratory Tract Diseases |
| D006973 | Hypertension |
| D014652 | Vascular Diseases |
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| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D015444 | Exercise |
| ID | Term |
|---|---|
| D009043 | Motor Activity |
| D009068 | Movement |
| D009142 | Musculoskeletal Physiological Phenomena |
| D055687 | Musculoskeletal and Neural Physiological Phenomena |
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| 15 weeks |
| Change in Borg scale 6-MWD training vs. control group | Borg scale 6-MWD | 15 weeks |
| Change in tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion | Echocardiographic parameter training vs. control Group; mm | 15 weeks |
| Change in tissue Doppler imaging | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control group | 15 weeks |
| Change in left ventricular pump function | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; qualitative | 15 weeks |
| Change in right ventricular pump function | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; qualitative | 15 weeks |
| Change in thickness of interventricular septum | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; mm | 15 weeks |
| Change insize of inferior vena cava | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; mm | 15 weeks |
| Change in systolic pulmonary arterial pressure | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; mmHg | 15 weeks |
| Change in left ventricular eccentricity index | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control group | 15 weeks |
| Change in Tei index | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control group | 15 weeks |
| Change in right ventricular area | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control group | 15 weeks |
| Change in right atrial area | Echocardiographic Parameter training vs. control Group; square cm | 15 weeks |
| Change in workload | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry) training vs. control Group; Watts | 15 weeks |
| Change in heart rate | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry) training vs. control Group; bpm | 15 weeks |
| Change in ventilation | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry) training vs. control Group; L/min | 15 weeks |
| Change in carbon dioxide output | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry) training vs. control Group | 15 weeks |
| Change in spiroergometry parameters in training vs. control group | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry): VO2 at anaerobic threshold determined by V-slope method | 15 weeks |
| Change in VCO2 at anaerobic threshold | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry): determined by V-slope method | 15 weeks |
| Change in oxygen uptake | Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (spiroergometry); L/min/kg | 15 weeks |
| Change in diffusion-limited carbon monoxide (DLCO) | Lung function; Diffusion capacity | 15 weeks |
| Change in alveolar volume (VA) | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in residual volume (RV) | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in total lung volume (TLC) | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in forced expiratory flow | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in peak expiratory flow rate | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) | Lung function; total and in percentage | 15 weeks |
| Change in forced vital capacity (FVC) | Lung function | 15 weeks |
| Change in NTproBNP | Laboratory marker for the impairment of the right heart | 15 weeks |
| Change in interleukins | Laboratory marker for the impairment of the right heart | 15 weeks |
| Change in inflammatory markers | Laboratory marker for the impairment of the right heart | 15 weeks |
| Change in carbon dioxide partial pressure | Blood gas Analysis | 15 weeks |
| Change in oxygen saturation of the blood (SaO2) | Blood gas analysis | 15 weeks |
| Change in additional oxygen supplementation (yes/no and quantity) | Blood gas analysis | 15 weeks |
| Change in oxygen partial pressure | Blood gas analysis | 15 weeks |
| Change in oxygen saturation | Safety Parameter; L/min | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of clinical laboratory Investigation alerts (values out of range) | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of adverse Events | Safety Parameter; unrelated and related to procedure | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of serious adverse events | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| frequency of hospitalizations | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| length of hospitalizations | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| Change in resting heart rate | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| Change in blood pressure | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| frequency of pathological findings in long-term ECG | Safety parameter | 15 weeks |
| Qualitative Review of electrocardiogram (ECG) | Safety Parameter; pathological findings | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of survival | Training and control Group; transplant-free and Overall survival | 1 year |
| Change of the right ventricular size | Optional: Changes in MRI parameters | 15 weeks |
| Change of the right ventricular pump function | Optional: Changes in MRI parameters | 15 weeks |
| Change of the left ventricular size | Optional: Changes in MRI parameters | 15 weeks |
| Change of the left ventricular pump function | Optional: Changes in MRI parameters | 15 weeks |
| Change in microRNA expression | Optional: Epigenetic changes | 15 weeks |
| Change in DNA-methylation | Optional: Epigenetic changes | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of relationship of DNA mutations and disease progression | Optional: Investigation of DNA mutations relationship to disease progression | 15 weeks |
| Assessment of relationship of DNA mutations and training effects | Optional: Investigation of DNA mutations | 15 weeks |
| Background |
| Grunig E, Ehlken N, Ghofrani A, Staehler G, Meyer FJ, Juenger J, Opitz CF, Klose H, Wilkens H, Rosenkranz S, Olschewski H, Halank M. Effect of exercise and respiratory training on clinical progression and survival in patients with severe chronic pulmonary hypertension. Respiration. 2011;81(5):394-401. doi: 10.1159/000322475. Epub 2011 Feb 9. |
| 22323570 | Background | Grunig E, Lichtblau M, Ehlken N, Ghofrani HA, Reichenberger F, Staehler G, Halank M, Fischer C, Seyfarth HJ, Klose H, Meyer A, Sorichter S, Wilkens H, Rosenkranz S, Opitz C, Leuchte H, Karger G, Speich R, Nagel C. Safety and efficacy of exercise training in various forms of pulmonary hypertension. Eur Respir J. 2012 Jul;40(1):84-92. doi: 10.1183/09031936.00123711. Epub 2012 Feb 9. |
| 22709477 | Background | Grunig E, Maier F, Ehlken N, Fischer C, Lichtblau M, Blank N, Fiehn C, Stockl F, Prange F, Staehler G, Reichenberger F, Tiede H, Halank M, Seyfarth HJ, Wagner S, Nagel C. Exercise training in pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with connective tissue diseases. Arthritis Res Ther. 2012 Jun 18;14(3):R148. doi: 10.1186/ar3883. |
| 22848542 | Background | Nagel C, Prange F, Guth S, Herb J, Ehlken N, Fischer C, Reichenberger F, Rosenkranz S, Seyfarth HJ, Mayer E, Halank M, Grunig E. Exercise training improves exercise capacity and quality of life in patients with inoperable or residual chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension. PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e41603. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0041603. Epub 2012 Jul 25. |
| 23041100 | Background | Becker-Grunig T, Klose H, Ehlken N, Lichtblau M, Nagel C, Fischer C, Gorenflo M, Tiede H, Schranz D, Hager A, Kaemmerer H, Miera O, Ulrich S, Speich R, Uiker S, Grunig E. Efficacy of exercise training in pulmonary arterial hypertension associated with congenital heart disease. Int J Cardiol. 2013 Sep 20;168(1):375-81. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2012.09.036. Epub 2012 Oct 5. |
| 23681593 | Background | Halank M, Einsle F, Lehman S, Bremer H, Ewert R, Wilkens H, Meyer FJ, Grunig E, Seyfarth HJ, Kolditz M, Wieder G, Hoffken G, Kollner V. Exercise capacity affects quality of life in patients with pulmonary hypertension. Lung. 2013 Aug;191(4):337-43. doi: 10.1007/s00408-013-9472-6. Epub 2013 May 17. |
| 24338088 | Background | Kabitz HJ, Bremer HC, Schwoerer A, Sonntag F, Walterspacher S, Walker DJ, Ehlken N, Staehler G, Windisch W, Grunig E. The combination of exercise and respiratory training improves respiratory muscle function in pulmonary hypertension. Lung. 2014 Apr;192(2):321-8. doi: 10.1007/s00408-013-9542-9. Epub 2013 Dec 13. |
| 26231884 | Background | Ehlken N, Lichtblau M, Klose H, Weidenhammer J, Fischer C, Nechwatal R, Uiker S, Halank M, Olsson K, Seeger W, Gall H, Rosenkranz S, Wilkens H, Mertens D, Seyfarth HJ, Opitz C, Ulrich S, Egenlauf B, Grunig E. Exercise training improves peak oxygen consumption and haemodynamics in patients with severe pulmonary arterial hypertension and inoperable chronic thrombo-embolic pulmonary hypertension: a prospective, randomized, controlled trial. Eur Heart J. 2016 Jan 1;37(1):35-44. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehv337. Epub 2015 Jul 31. |
| D002318 |
| Cardiovascular Diseases |