University of California, San Francisco.
Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken). 2018 Jan;70(1):1-10. doi: 10.1002/acr.23230. Epub 2017 Dec 6.
Effective treatments for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) fatigue are limited. We tested the effect of a pedometer-based intervention on increasing physical activity and decreasing fatigue among individuals with RA.
Participants completed baseline questionnaires; had 1 week of activity monitoring; were randomized to control (education [EDUC]), pedometer and step-monitoring diary (PED), or pedometer and diary plus step targets (PED+) groups, and were followed for 21 weeks. At week 10, questionnaires were administered by phone to all participants. During the final week, all participants again had 1 week of activity monitoring. Primary outcomes were changes in average weekly steps and fatigue (Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System 7-item questionnaire) from baseline to week 21. Secondary outcomes were self-reported disease activity, physical function, pain interference, and depressive symptoms. Changes in steps were tested using a linear mixed model. Changes in fatigue were tested with repeated-measures models, including baseline, week-10, and week-21 scores.
A total of 96 individuals participated. Eight did not complete the 21-week assessments. Both intervention groups significantly increased steps (+1,441 [P = 0.004] for PED and +1,656 [P = 0.001] for PED+), and the EDUC group decreased steps (-747 [P = 0.14]) (group-by-time interaction P = 0.0025). Between-group changes in fatigue were not significantly different (interaction P = 0.21). Mean changes in fatigue scores from baseline to week 21 were -1.6 (with-group P = 0.26), -3.2 (P = 0.02), and -4.8 (P = 0.0002) for EDUC, PED, and PED+ groups, respectively. Function and self-reported disease activity also improved in the PED and PED+ groups.
Provision of pedometers, with and without providing step targets, was successful in increasing activity levels and decreasing fatigue in this sample of individuals with RA.
类风湿关节炎(RA)疲劳的有效治疗方法有限。我们测试了基于计步器的干预措施对增加 RA 患者身体活动和减少疲劳的效果。
参与者完成基线问卷;进行了 1 周的活动监测;随机分为对照组(教育[EDUC])、计步器和步数监测日记(PED)组或计步器和日记加步数目标(PED+)组,并随访 21 周。在第 10 周,所有参与者通过电话进行问卷调查。在最后一周,所有参与者再次进行了 1 周的活动监测。主要结果是从基线到第 21 周平均每周步数和疲劳(患者报告的结果测量信息系统 7 项问卷)的变化。次要结果是自我报告的疾病活动度、身体功能、疼痛干扰和抑郁症状。使用线性混合模型测试步数的变化。使用重复测量模型测试疲劳的变化,包括基线、第 10 周和第 21 周的分数。
共有 96 人参与。8 人未完成 21 周评估。两个干预组的步数都显著增加(PED 组增加 1441 步,PED+组增加 1656 步,P = 0.004 和 P = 0.001),EDUC 组的步数减少(-747 步,P = 0.14)(组间时间交互 P = 0.0025)。疲劳的组间变化无显著差异(交互 P = 0.21)。从基线到第 21 周,EDUC、PED 和 PED+组的疲劳评分分别平均下降 1.6(组内 P = 0.26)、-3.2(P = 0.02)和-4.8(P = 0.0002)。PED 和 PED+组的身体功能和自我报告的疾病活动度也有所改善。
在本 RA 患者样本中,提供计步器,无论是否提供步数目标,都成功地增加了活动水平并减轻了疲劳。