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Title: | Personalized remotely guided preventive exercise therapy for a healthy heart (PRIORITY): protocol for an assessor-blinded, multicenter randomized controlled trial | Authors: | DE WILDE, Camille BEKHUIS, Youri Kuznetsova, Tatiana Claes, Jomme CLAESSEN, Guido CONINX, Karin DECORTE, Elise De Smedt, Delphine HANSEN, Dominique Lannoo, Matthias Van Craenenbroeck, Emeline Verhaeghe, Nick Cornelissen, Véronique |
Corporate Authors: | PRIORITY investigator group | Issue Date: | 2023 | Publisher: | Source: | Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine, 10 (Art N° 1194693) | Abstract: | Aims: A key treatment for patients with varying stages of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is exercise. Yet, despite a Class 1A recommendation, only one-third of patients exercise sufficiently. A huge treatment gap exists between guidelines and clinical practice. PRIORITY aims to establish the feasibility, clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a hybrid centre and home-based personalized exercise and physical activity intervention for patients along the HFpEF continuum.Methods: An assessor-blinded, multicenter randomized controlled trial will be conducted among 312 patients along the HFpEF continuum. Participants will be randomized (1:1) to the PRIORITY intervention or a comparator group receiving only a written exercise prescription. Participants in the PRIORITY group will receive 18 supervised centre-based exercise sessions during one year, supplemented with a remotely guided home-based physical activity program. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline, 4 months, one and two years. The primary outcome is the peak oxygen uptake (pVO2) at 1-year. Secondary outcomes include physical activity, other physical fitness parameters, cardiovascular health, echocardiographic parameters, health-related quality of life and costs at 1-year FU. Machine learning algorithms will analyse big data on physical activity collected during the 1-year intervention to develop models that can predict physical activity uptake and adherence as well as changes in fitness and health. A cost-utility analysis will be performed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of the PRIORITY intervention compared to the control condition.Discussion: We anticipate that participants in the supervised home-based exercise intervention group will have a greater increase in pVO2 compared to those receiving a written exercise prescription. | Keywords: | exercise;personalized;heart failure;prevention;obesity;diabetes;cost-effectiveness (economics);randomized controlled trial | Document URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/1942/40598 | ISSN: | 2297-055X | e-ISSN: | 2297-055X | DOI: | 10.3389/fcvm.2023.1194693 | ISI #: | 001027016700001 | Category: | A1 | Type: | Journal Contribution | Validations: | ecoom 2024 |
Appears in Collections: | Research publications |
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De Wilde et al Front Cardiovasc Med 2023.pdf | Published version | 2.45 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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