Mamataz Taslima, Ghisi Gabriela Lm, Pakosh Maureen, Grace Sherry L
Faculty of Health, York University, Toronto, ON, Canada.
KITE-Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Maturitas. 2022 Jun;160:32-60. doi: 10.1016/j.maturitas.2022.01.008. Epub 2022 Jan 29.
The aim of this systematic review was to investigate the effects of women-focused cardiac rehabilitation (CR) on patient outcomes and cost.
Medline, PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science, Scopus and Emcare were searched for articles from inception through to May 2020. Primary studies of any design were included, with adult females with any cardiac diseases. "Women-focused" CR comprised programs or sessions with >50% females, or 1-1 programming tailored to women's preferences. No studies were excluded on the basis of outcome. Two independent reviewers rated citations for potential inclusion, and one extracted data, including on quality, which was checked independently. Random-effects meta-analysis was used where there were ≥3 trials with the same outcome; certainty of evidence for these was determined based on GRADE. For other outcomes, SWiM was applied.
3498 unique citations were identified, of which 28 studies (52 papers) were included (3,697 participants; 11 trials). No meta-analysis could be performed for outcomes with "usual care" comparisons. Compared to "active comparison" group, women-focused CR had no meaningful additional effect on functional capacity. Women-focused CR meaningfully improved physical (mean difference [MD]=6.37, 95% confidence interval [CI]=3.14-9.59; I=0%; moderate-quality evidence) and mental (MD=4.66, 95% CI=0.21-9.11; I=36%; low-quality evidence) quality of life, as well as scores on seven of the eight SF-36 domains. Qualitatively, results showed women-focused CR was associated with lower morbidity, risk factors, and greater psychosocial well-being. No effect was observed for mortality. One study reported a favorable economic impact and another reported reduced sick days.
Women-focused CR is associated with clinical benefit, although there is mixed evidence and more research is needed.
CRD42020189760.
本系统评价的目的是研究以女性为中心的心脏康复(CR)对患者预后和成本的影响。
检索了Medline、PubMed、Embase、PsycINFO、CINAHL、Web of Science、Scopus和Emcare数据库,纳入从建库至2020年5月发表的文章。纳入任何设计的原发性研究,研究对象为患有任何心脏病的成年女性。“以女性为中心”的心脏康复包括女性占比超过50%的项目或课程,或根据女性偏好进行的一对一辅导。不基于研究结果排除任何研究。两名独立评审员对可能纳入的文献进行评分,一名评审员提取数据,包括质量数据,并由另一名评审员独立检查。对于有≥3项相同结果试验的情况,采用随机效应荟萃分析;基于GRADE确定这些结果的证据确定性。对于其他结果,采用综合比较方法(SWiM)。
共识别出3498篇独特的文献,其中28项研究(52篇论文)被纳入(3697名参与者;11项试验)。对于与“常规护理”比较的结果,无法进行荟萃分析。与“积极对照”组相比,以女性为中心的心脏康复对功能能力没有显著的额外影响。以女性为中心的心脏康复显著改善了身体(平均差值[MD]=6.37,95%置信区间[CI]=3.14-9.59;I²=0%;中等质量证据)和心理(MD=4.66,95%CI=0.21-9.11;I²=36%;低质量证据)生活质量,以及SF-36八个维度中七个维度的得分。定性分析结果显示,以女性为中心的心脏康复与较低的发病率、风险因素以及更好的社会心理健康相关。未观察到对死亡率的影响。一项研究报告了有利的经济影响,另一项研究报告病假天数减少。
以女性为中心的心脏康复与临床获益相关,尽管证据不一,仍需更多研究。
国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)注册号:CRD42020189760。