Rawal Himanshu, Cornelison Sharon D, Flynn Sheryl M, Ohar Jill A
Department of Internal Medicine, Section on Pulmonary Medicine, Critical Care, Allergy and Immunologic Diseases, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA.
Department of Pulmonary and Cardiac Rehabilitation, J. Paul Sticht Center on Aging and Rehabilitation, Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist, Medical Center Boulevard, Winston-Salem, NC 27157, USA.
Life (Basel). 2021 Nov 20;11(11):1270. doi: 10.3390/life11111270.
Despite numerous benefits, traditional Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) as a resource remains underutilized in chronic lung disease. Less than 3% of eligible candidates for PR attend one or more sessions after hospitalization due to many barriers, including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. Emerging alternative models of PR delivery such as home-based PR, tele-rehabilitation, web-based PR, or hybrid models could help address these barriers. Numerous studies have tested the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of these methods, but there is wide variability across studies and methods. We conducted a literature review to help determine if these alternative delivery methods watered down the effectiveness of PR. To evaluate the effectiveness of remotely based PR, the authors performed a literature search for randomized controlled trials (RCTs), cohort studies, and case series using PubMed, CINAHL, and Medline to identify relevant articles through 1 May 2021. Twenty-six applicable studies were found in which 11 compared tele-rehabilitation to conventional clinic-based PR; 11 evaluated tele-rehabilitation using the patient's baseline status as control; and four compared tele-rehabilitation to no rehabilitation. Despite the different technologies used across studies, tele-rehabilitation was found to be both a feasible and an efficacious option for select patients with lung disease. Outcomes across these studies demonstrated similar benefits to traditional PR programs. Thus the existing data does not show that remotely based PR waters down the effectiveness of conventional PR. Use of remotely based PR is a feasible and effective option to deliver PR, especially for patients with significant barriers to conventional clinic-based PR. Additional, well-conducted RCTs are needed to answer the questions regarding its efficacy, safety, cost-effectiveness and who, among patients with COPD and other lung diseases, will derive the maximum benefit.
尽管传统肺康复(PR)有诸多益处,但作为一种资源,它在慢性肺病中的利用率仍然很低。由于包括持续的新冠疫情在内的诸多障碍,符合条件的肺康复候选人中不到3%在住院后参加了一次或多次康复治疗。新兴的替代肺康复模式,如居家肺康复、远程康复、基于网络的肺康复或混合模式,可能有助于克服这些障碍。许多研究已经测试了这些方法的可行性、安全性和有效性,但不同研究和方法之间存在很大差异。我们进行了一项文献综述,以帮助确定这些替代实施方法是否会降低肺康复的有效性。为了评估基于远程的肺康复的有效性,作者使用PubMed、CINAHL和Medline对随机对照试验(RCT)、队列研究和病例系列进行了文献检索,以识别截至2021年5月1日的相关文章。共找到26项适用研究,其中11项将远程康复与传统的基于诊所的肺康复进行了比较;11项以患者的基线状态作为对照评估了远程康复;4项将远程康复与无康复治疗进行了比较。尽管不同研究使用了不同技术,但远程康复被发现对于部分肺病患者来说是一种可行且有效的选择。这些研究的结果显示出与传统肺康复项目相似的益处。因此,现有数据并未表明基于远程的肺康复会降低传统肺康复的有效性。使用基于远程的肺康复是实施肺康复的一种可行且有效的选择,特别是对于那些参加传统基于诊所的肺康复存在重大障碍的患者。还需要进行更多精心设计的随机对照试验,以回答有关其疗效、安全性、成本效益以及慢性阻塞性肺疾病和其他肺病患者中哪些人将获得最大益处的问题。