Impact of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in patients with heart failure (ExTraMATCH II) on mortality and hospitalisation: an individual patient data meta-analysis of randomised trials.

Pubmed ID: 30255969

Pubmed Central ID: PMC7262555

Journal: European journal of heart failure

Publication Date: Dec. 1, 2018

Affiliation: National Knowledge Centre for Rehabilitation and Palliative Care, University Hospital Odense and University of Southern Denmark, Nyborg, Denmark.

Link: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/ejhf.1311

MeSH Terms: Humans, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Heart Failure, Hospitalization, Quality of Life, Survival Rate, Exercise, Exercise Therapy, Global Health, Cardiac Rehabilitation

Grants: HTA/15/80/30, R01 AT002454, RP-PG-1210-12004, K24 AT009465

Authors: Myers J, Coats A, Keteyian SJ, Taylor RS, Walker S, Smart NA, Piepoli MF, Warren FC, Ciani O, O'Connor C, Whellan D, Davos CH, Dalal HM, Dracup K, Evangelista L, Jolly K, McKelvie RS, Nilsson BB, Passino C, Witham MD, Yeh GY, Zwisler AO

Cite As: Taylor RS, Walker S, Smart NA, Piepoli MF, Warren FC, Ciani O, O'Connor C, Whellan D, Keteyian SJ, Coats A, Davos CH, Dalal HM, Dracup K, Evangelista L, Jolly K, Myers J, McKelvie RS, Nilsson BB, Passino C, Witham MD, Yeh GY, Zwisler AO, ExTraMATCH II Collaboration. Impact of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in patients with heart failure (ExTraMATCH II) on mortality and hospitalisation: an individual patient data meta-analysis of randomised trials. Eur J Heart Fail 2018 Dec;20(12):1735-1743. Epub 2018 Sep 26.

Studies:

Abstract

AIMS: To undertake an individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis to assess the impact of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (ExCR) in patients with heart failure (HF) on mortality and hospitalisation, and differential effects of ExCR according to patient characteristics: age, sex, ethnicity, New York Heart Association functional class, ischaemic aetiology, ejection fraction, and exercise capacity. METHODS AND RESULTS: Randomised trials of exercise training for at least 3 weeks compared with no exercise control with 6-month follow-up or longer, providing IPD time to event on mortality or hospitalisation (all-cause or HF-specific). IPD were combined into a single dataset. We used Cox proportional hazards models to investigate the effect of ExCR and the interactions between ExCR and participant characteristics. We used both two-stage random effects and one-stage fixed effect models. IPD were obtained from 18 trials including 3912 patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction. Compared to control, there was no statistically significant difference in pooled time to event estimates in favour of ExCR although confidence intervals (CIs) were wide [all-cause mortality: hazard ratio (HR) 0.83, 95% CI 0.67-1.04; HF-specific mortality: HR 0.84, 95% CI 0.49-1.46; all-cause hospitalisation: HR 0.90, 95% CI 0.76-1.06; and HF-specific hospitalisation: HR 0.98, 95% CI 0.72-1.35]. No strong evidence was found of differential intervention effects across patient characteristics. CONCLUSION: Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation did not have a significant effect on the risk of mortality and hospitalisation in HF with reduced ejection fraction. However, uncertainty around effect estimates precludes drawing definitive conclusions.