Anderson Lindsey, Sharp Georgina A, Norton Rebecca J, Dalal Hasnain, Dean Sarah G, Jolly Kate, Cowie Aynsley, Zawada Anna, Taylor Rod S
Institute of Health Research, University of Exeter Medical School, Veysey Building, Salmon Pool Lane, Exeter, UK, EX2 4SG.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017 Jun 30;6(6):CD007130. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007130.pub4.
Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death globally. Traditionally, centre-based cardiac rehabilitation programmes are offered to individuals after cardiac events to aid recovery and prevent further cardiac illness. Home-based cardiac rehabilitation programmes have been introduced in an attempt to widen access and participation. This is an update of a review previously published in 2009 and 2015.
To compare the effect of home-based and supervised centre-based cardiac rehabilitation on mortality and morbidity, exercise-capacity, health-related quality of life, and modifiable cardiac risk factors in patients with heart disease.
We updated searches from the previous Cochrane Review by searching the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), MEDLINE (Ovid), Embase (Ovid), PsycINFO (Ovid) and CINAHL (EBSCO) on 21 September 2016. We also searched two clinical trials registers as well as previous systematic reviews and reference lists of included studies. No language restrictions were applied.
We included randomised controlled trials, including parallel group, cross-over or quasi-randomised designs) that compared centre-based cardiac rehabilitation (e.g. hospital, gymnasium, sports centre) with home-based programmes in adults with myocardial infarction, angina, heart failure or who had undergone revascularisation.
Two review authors independently screened all identified references for inclusion based on pre-defined inclusion criteria. Disagreements were resolved through discussion or by involving a third review author. Two authors independently extracted outcome data and study characteristics and assessed risk of bias. Quality of evidence was assessed using GRADE principles and a Summary of findings table was created.
We included six new studies (624 participants) for this update, which now includes a total of 23 trials that randomised a total of 2890 participants undergoing cardiac rehabilitation. Participants had an acute myocardial infarction, revascularisation or heart failure. A number of studies provided insufficient detail to enable assessment of potential risk of bias, in particular, details of generation and concealment of random allocation sequencing and blinding of outcome assessment were poorly reported.No evidence of a difference was seen between home- and centre-based cardiac rehabilitation in clinical primary outcomes up to 12 months of follow up: total mortality (relative risk (RR) = 1.19, 95% CI 0.65 to 2.16; participants = 1505; studies = 11/comparisons = 13; very low quality evidence), exercise capacity (standardised mean difference (SMD) = -0.13, 95% CI -0.28 to 0.02; participants = 2255; studies = 22/comparisons = 26; low quality evidence), or health-related quality of life up to 24 months (not estimable). Trials were generally of short duration, with only three studies reporting outcomes beyond 12 months (exercise capacity: SMD 0.11, 95% CI -0.01 to 0.23; participants = 1074; studies = 3; moderate quality evidence). However, there was evidence of marginally higher levels of programme completion (RR 1.04, 95% CI 1.00 to 1.08; participants = 2615; studies = 22/comparisons = 26; low quality evidence) by home-based participants.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This update supports previous conclusions that home- and centre-based forms of cardiac rehabilitation seem to be similarly effective in improving clinical and health-related quality of life outcomes in patients after myocardial infarction or revascularisation, or with heart failure. This finding supports the continued expansion of evidence-based, home-based cardiac rehabilitation programmes. The choice of participating in a more traditional and supervised centre-based programme or a home-based programme may reflect local availability and consider the preference of the individual patient. Further data are needed to determine whether the effects of home- and centre-based cardiac rehabilitation reported in the included short-term trials can be confirmed in the longer term and need to consider adequately powered non-inferiority or equivalence study designs.
心血管疾病是全球最常见的死亡原因。传统上,基于中心的心脏康复计划是在心脏事件发生后提供给个人,以帮助恢复并预防进一步的心脏疾病。家庭心脏康复计划已被引入,试图扩大可及性和参与度。这是对先前于2009年和2015年发表的一篇综述的更新。
比较家庭心脏康复和有监督的基于中心的心脏康复对心脏病患者死亡率、发病率、运动能力、健康相关生活质量以及可改变的心脏危险因素的影响。
我们通过于2016年9月21日检索Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)、MEDLINE(Ovid)、Embase(Ovid)、PsycINFO(Ovid)和CINAHL(EBSCO)对先前的Cochrane综述进行了更新检索。我们还检索了两个临床试验注册库以及先前的系统评价和纳入研究的参考文献列表。未应用语言限制。
我们纳入了随机对照试验,包括平行组、交叉或半随机设计,这些试验比较了基于中心的心脏康复(如医院、体育馆、体育中心)与针对心肌梗死、心绞痛、心力衰竭或接受过血运重建的成年人的家庭康复计划。
两位综述作者根据预先定义的纳入标准独立筛选所有已识别的参考文献以纳入。分歧通过讨论解决或由第三位综述作者参与解决。两位作者独立提取结局数据和研究特征并评估偏倚风险。使用GRADE原则评估证据质量并创建了结果总结表。
本次更新我们纳入了6项新研究(624名参与者),现在总共包括23项试验,这些试验将总共2890名接受心脏康复的参与者随机分组。参与者患有急性心肌梗死、血运重建或心力衰竭。一些研究提供的细节不足,无法评估潜在的偏倚风险,特别是随机分配序列的产生和隐藏以及结局评估的盲法等细节报告不佳。在长达12个月的随访中,家庭心脏康复和基于中心的心脏康复在临床主要结局方面没有差异的证据:总死亡率(相对危险度(RR)=1.19,95%可信区间0.65至2.16;参与者=1505;研究=11/比较=13;极低质量证据)、运动能力(标准化均数差(SMD)=-0.13,95%可信区间-0.28至0.02;参与者=2255;研究=22/比较=26;低质量证据)或长达24个月的健康相关生活质量(无法估计)。试验通常持续时间较短,只有3项研究报告了12个月以上的结局(运动能力:SMD=0.11,95%可信区间-0.01至0.23;参与者=1074;研究=3;中等质量证据)。然而,有证据表明家庭康复参与者的计划完成水平略高(RR=1.04,95%可信区间1.00至1.08;参与者=2615;研究=