Post-Hospitalisation COVID-19 Rehabilitation (PHOSP-R): A randomised controlled trial of exercise-based rehabilitation
Enya Daynes, Rachael A Evans, Neil J Greening, Nicolette C Bishop, Thomas Yates, Daniel Lozano-Rojas, Kimon Ntotsis, Matthew Richardson, Molly M Baldwin, Malik Hamrouni, Emily Hume, Hamish McAuley, George Mills, Dimitrios Megaritis, Matthew Roberts, Charlotte E Bolton, James D Chalmers, Trudie Chalder, Annemarie B Docherty, Omer Elneima, Ewen M Harrison, Victoria C Harris, Ling p Ho, Alex Horsley, Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, Olivia C Leavy, Michael Marks, Krishna Poinasamy, Jennifer K Quint, Betty Raman, Ruth M Saunders, Aarti Shikotra, Amisha Singapuri, Marco Sereno, Sarah Terry, Louise V Wain, William D-C Man, Carlos Echevarria, Ioannis Vogiatzis, Christopher Brightling, Sally J Singh
Objective
Post-COVID syndrome involves prolonged symptoms with multi-system and functional impairment lasting at least 12 weeks after acute COVID-19. We aimed to determine the efficacy of exercise-based rehabilitation interventions, either face-to-face or remote, compared to usual care in individuals experiencing Post-COVID syndrome following a hospitalisation of acute COVID-19.
Design
This single-blind randomised controlled trial compared two COVID exercise-based rehabilitation interventions (face-to-face or remote) to usual care in participants with Post-COVID syndrome following a hospitalisation. The interventions were either a face-to-face or remote eight-week program of individually prescribed exercise and education. The primary outcome was the change in Incremental Shuttle Walking Test (ISWT) following eight weeks of intervention (either face-to-face or remote) compared to usual care. Other secondary outcomes were measured including health related quality of life (HRQoL), and exploratory outcomes included lymphocyte immunotyping.
Results
181 participants (55% male, mean [sd] age 59 [12] years, length of hospital stay 12 [19] days) were randomised. There was an improvement in the ISWT distance following face-to-face rehabilitation (mean 52 [95% CI 19 to 85]m, p=0·002) and remote rehabilitation (mean 34 [95% CI 1 to 66]m, p=0·047) compared to usual care alone. There were no differences between groups for HRQoL of self-reported symptoms. Analysis of immune markers revealed significant increases in naïve and memory CD8+ T cells following face-to-face rehabilitation versus usual care alone (p<0·001, n=31).
Conclusion
Exercise-based rehabilitation improved short-term exercise capacity in Post-COVID syndrome following an acute hospitalisation and showed potential for beneficial immunomodulatory effects.
Link | PDF (European Respiratory Journal) [Open Access]
Enya Daynes, Rachael A Evans, Neil J Greening, Nicolette C Bishop, Thomas Yates, Daniel Lozano-Rojas, Kimon Ntotsis, Matthew Richardson, Molly M Baldwin, Malik Hamrouni, Emily Hume, Hamish McAuley, George Mills, Dimitrios Megaritis, Matthew Roberts, Charlotte E Bolton, James D Chalmers, Trudie Chalder, Annemarie B Docherty, Omer Elneima, Ewen M Harrison, Victoria C Harris, Ling p Ho, Alex Horsley, Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, Olivia C Leavy, Michael Marks, Krishna Poinasamy, Jennifer K Quint, Betty Raman, Ruth M Saunders, Aarti Shikotra, Amisha Singapuri, Marco Sereno, Sarah Terry, Louise V Wain, William D-C Man, Carlos Echevarria, Ioannis Vogiatzis, Christopher Brightling, Sally J Singh
Objective
Post-COVID syndrome involves prolonged symptoms with multi-system and functional impairment lasting at least 12 weeks after acute COVID-19. We aimed to determine the efficacy of exercise-based rehabilitation interventions, either face-to-face or remote, compared to usual care in individuals experiencing Post-COVID syndrome following a hospitalisation of acute COVID-19.
Design
This single-blind randomised controlled trial compared two COVID exercise-based rehabilitation interventions (face-to-face or remote) to usual care in participants with Post-COVID syndrome following a hospitalisation. The interventions were either a face-to-face or remote eight-week program of individually prescribed exercise and education. The primary outcome was the change in Incremental Shuttle Walking Test (ISWT) following eight weeks of intervention (either face-to-face or remote) compared to usual care. Other secondary outcomes were measured including health related quality of life (HRQoL), and exploratory outcomes included lymphocyte immunotyping.
Results
181 participants (55% male, mean [sd] age 59 [12] years, length of hospital stay 12 [19] days) were randomised. There was an improvement in the ISWT distance following face-to-face rehabilitation (mean 52 [95% CI 19 to 85]m, p=0·002) and remote rehabilitation (mean 34 [95% CI 1 to 66]m, p=0·047) compared to usual care alone. There were no differences between groups for HRQoL of self-reported symptoms. Analysis of immune markers revealed significant increases in naïve and memory CD8+ T cells following face-to-face rehabilitation versus usual care alone (p<0·001, n=31).
Conclusion
Exercise-based rehabilitation improved short-term exercise capacity in Post-COVID syndrome following an acute hospitalisation and showed potential for beneficial immunomodulatory effects.
Link | PDF (European Respiratory Journal) [Open Access]