학술논문

Effect of digital tools in outpatient cardiac rehabilitation including home training—results of the EPICURE study
Document Type
article
Source
Frontiers in Digital Health, Vol 5 (2023)
Subject
mHealth
telehealth
cardiac rehabilitation
wearable
adherence
Medicine
Public aspects of medicine
RA1-1270
Electronic computers. Computer science
QA75.5-76.95
Language
English
ISSN
2673-253X
Abstract
IntroductionCardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death worldwide and are partly caused by modifiable risk factors. Cardiac rehabilitation addresses several of these modifiable risk factors, such as physical inactivity and reduced exercise capacity. However, despite its proven short-term merits, long-term adherence to healthy lifestyle changes is disappointing. With regards to exercise training, it has been shown that rehabilitation supplemented by a) home-based exercise training and b) supportive digital tools can improve adherence.MethodsIn our multi-center study (ClincalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04458727), we analyzed the effect of supportive digital tools like digital diaries and/or wearables such as smart watches, activity trackers, etc. on exercise capacity during cardiac rehabilitation. Patients after completion of phase III out-patient cardiac rehabilitation, which included a 3 to 6-months lasting home-training phase, were recruited in five cardiac rehabilitation centers in Austria. Retrospective rehabilitation data were analyzed, and additional data were generated via patient questionnaires.Results107 patients who did not use supportive tools and 50 patients using supportive tools were recruited. Already prior to phase III rehabilitation, patients with supportive tools showed higher exercise capacity (Pmax = 186 ± 53 W) as compared to patients without supportive tools (142 ± 41 W, p