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1STST and Muscle Weakness in CF Patients

C

Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc- Université Catholique de Louvain

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cystic Fibrosis

Treatments

Device: Accelerometer
Behavioral: 1 minute sit to stand test
Device: Microfet Dynamometer

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators know that peripheral muscle weakness and exercise intolerance are prevalent (56%) in cystic fibrosis (Trooster et al, 2009). Physical inactivity is likely to be an important underlying factor. Those conditions are associated with a poor prognosis (Nixon et al, 1992). The effect of intravenous antibiotherapy on peripheral muscle and physical activity remains unclear.

The aim of the study is to evaluate the impact of intravenous antibiotherapy on peripheral muscular strength in patients with cystic fibrosis (adults and children) who receive intravenous antibiotherapy for an acute exacerbation or electively (decline in lung function without exacerbation).

Full description

Background Peripheral muscle weakness and exercise intolerance are prevalent (56%) in cystic fibrosis (Trooster et al, 2009). Physical inactivity is likely to be an important underlying factor. Those conditions are associated with a poor prognosis (Nixon et al, 1992). The effect of intravenous antibiotherapy on peripheral muscle and physical activity remains unclear. Wieboldt et al showed that quadriceps strength at the hospital admission for an exacerbation was lower than before and one month after hospitalisation while Burtin et al showed that individual changes in quadriceps force were correlated with daily time spent activities of at least moderate intensity (Wieboldt et al, 2012; Burtin et al, 2013). The effect of intravenous antibiotherapy itself is poorly known in cystic fibrosis. Moreover, they did not study the impact on muscular strength of hospitalisation versus home treatment. In contrast, in COPD, it is well known that exacerbations are associated with a decline of muscle mass and strength and that repeated exacerbations lead to a more rapid decrease in fat free mass (Spruit et al, 2003; Jones et al, 2015; Joppa et al, 2016).

Hypothesis We think that exacerbations aggravate factors underlying muscle weakness as physical inactivity, systemic inflammation and anabolic status. Moreover, hospitalisation itself might be a reason of inactivity as patients spent all the day inside their room compared to patients who follow their treatment at home and continue their usual life.

Aim The aim of our study is to evaluate the impact of an intravenous antibiotherapy on peripheral muscular strength in patients with cystic fibrosis.

Methods We would compare patients (adults and children) who receive intravenous antibiotherapy for an acute exacerbation, with patients who receive elective intravenous antibiotherapy (decline in lung function without exacerbation). We will also compare hospitalised patients who receive specific exercise training, with patients who follow their antibiotherapy at home without specific exercise training. We will have a stable patients group as control. To evaluate muscular strength we plan to measure quadriceps force at the beginning of the cure and at the end with a functional test, the 1-minute Sit-to-Stand test and a strength (isometric) test, with the Microfet2dynamometer. Those test are not invasive, easy to realise and have already been used in other studies (Ozalevli, 2005). We will quantify the physical activity level of the patients with an accelerometer that they will carry during 72 hours, during the first week of the treatment.

Enrollment

81 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 99 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • patients with cystic fibrosis following the definition of Rosentein et al (1997), who undergo an intravenous antibiotic cure for an acute exacerbation or electively since we notice a decline of respiratory lung function

Exclusion criteria

  • orthopaedic conditions interfering with mobility or the assessment of skeletal muscle force,
  • a pregnancy,
  • a pulmonary graft
  • a negative response for the informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

81 participants in 2 patient groups

Acute IV AB for exacerbation at hospital
Active Comparator group
Description:
The study will compare muscular strength of hospitalised patients who receive specific exercise training, with patients who follow their antibiotherapy at home without specific exercise training. Interventions: microfet dynamometer, 1 minute sit to stand test, accelerometer.
Treatment:
Device: Microfet Dynamometer
Device: Accelerometer
Behavioral: 1 minute sit to stand test
Acute IV AB for exacerbation at home
Experimental group
Description:
The study will compare muscular strength of hospitalised patients who receive specific exercise training, with patients who follow their antibiotherapy at home without specific exercise training. Interventions: microfet dynamometer, 1 minute sit to stand test, accelerometer.
Treatment:
Device: Microfet Dynamometer
Device: Accelerometer
Behavioral: 1 minute sit to stand test

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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