Dibben Grace O, Gardiner Lucy, Young Hannah M L, Wells Valerie, Evans Rachael A, Ahmed Zahira, Barber Shaun, Dean Sarah, Doherty Patrick, Gardiner Nikki, Greaves Colin, Ibbotson Tracy, Jani Bhautesh D, Jolly Kate, Mair Frances S, McIntosh Emma, Ormandy Paula, Simpson Sharon A, Ahmed Sayem, Krauth Stefanie J, Steell Lewis, Singh Sally J, Taylor Rod S
MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
EClinicalMedicine. 2024 Apr 30;72:102599. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102599. eCollection 2024 Jun.
Almost half of the global population face significant challenges from long-term conditions (LTCs) resulting in substantive health and socioeconomic burden. Exercise is a potentially key intervention in effective LTC management.
In this overview of systematic reviews (SRs), we searched six electronic databases from January 2000 to October 2023 for SRs assessing health outcomes (mortality, hospitalisation, exercise capacity, disability, frailty, health-related quality of life (HRQoL), and physical activity) related to exercise-based interventions in adults (aged >18 years) diagnosed with one of 45 LTCs. Methodological quality was assessed using AMSTAR-2. International Prospective Resister of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) ID: CRD42022319214.
Forty-two SRs plus three supplementary RCTs were included, providing 990 RCTs in 936,825 people across 39 LTCs. No evidence was identified for six LTCs. Predominant outcome domains were HRQoL (82% of SRs/RCTs) and exercise capacity (66%); whereas disability, mortality, physical activity, and hospitalisation were less frequently reported (≤25%). Evidence supporting exercise-based interventions was identified in 25 LTCs, was unclear for 13 LTCs, and for one LTC suggested no effect. No SRs considered multimorbidity in the delivery of exercise. Methodological quality varied: critically-low (33%), low (26%), moderate (26%), and high (12%).
Exercise-based interventions improve HRQoL and exercise capacity across numerous LTCs. Key evidence gaps included limited mortality and hospitalisation data and consideration of multimorbidity impact on exercise-based interventions.
This study was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR; Personalised Exercise-Rehabilitation FOR people with Multiple long-term conditions (multimorbidity)-NIHR202020).
全球近一半人口面临长期疾病(LTCs)带来的重大挑战,这导致了巨大的健康和社会经济负担。运动是有效管理长期疾病的一项潜在关键干预措施。
在本系统评价概述中,我们检索了2000年1月至2023年10月期间的六个电子数据库,以查找评估与针对诊断患有45种长期疾病之一的成年人(年龄>18岁)进行的基于运动的干预措施相关的健康结局(死亡率、住院率、运动能力、残疾、衰弱、健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)和身体活动)的系统评价。使用AMSTAR-2评估方法学质量。国际系统评价前瞻性注册库(PROSPERO)标识符:CRD42022319214。
纳入了42项系统评价以及三项补充随机对照试验,涉及39种长期疾病的936825人中有990项随机对照试验。未发现六种长期疾病的相关证据。主要结局领域是健康相关生活质量(82%的系统评价/随机对照试验)和运动能力(66%);而残疾、死亡率、身体活动和住院率的报告频率较低(≤25%)。在25种长期疾病中发现了支持基于运动的干预措施的证据,13种长期疾病的证据不明确,一种长期疾病的证据表明没有效果。没有系统评价考虑在运动实施过程中的共病情况。方法学质量各不相同:极低(33%)、低(26%)、中等(26%)和高(12%)。
基于运动的干预措施可改善多种长期疾病患者的健康相关生活质量和运动能力。关键证据差距包括死亡率和住院率数据有限,以及未考虑共病对基于运动的干预措施的影响。
本研究由国家卫生与保健研究所(NIHR;针对患有多种长期疾病(共病)的人群的个性化运动康复-NIHR202020)资助。