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About
This study is being completed because there is conflicting information regarding the value of monitored exercise in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The purpose of this study is to collect baseline information necessary for researchers to pursue a larger study evaluating how monitored exercise performed during cardiac rehabilitation may improve heart health and the amount of oxygen delivered to the tissues during exercise. Researchers must first examine whether the facility is capable of supporting such a study and whether in a modest number of patients, there is no clear detrimental effect to exercise. Rather, there may be an important improvement that has been underestimated to date.
Participation will require a time commitment for performing exercise 3 times per week for 12 weeks in addition to having a small amount of blood drawn twice. There will also be a specialized form of a stress test (cardiopulmonary exercise test; "CPET") with ultrasound imaging of the heart (echocardiography) completed twice.
Full description
Small studies have suggested that supervised exercise training improves cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) in some patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), but the response rate to exercise is broad, and the impact of exercise on quality of life and physical functioning at the Veteran level are incompletely understood. More recently, HFpEF patients randomized to moderate levels of exercise (moderate continuous training; MCT) increased VO2Peak, the quatitative measure of CRF) but not to the very aggressive level specified by the study. As such, the findings were considered statistically insignificant. To address the clinical question utilizing accepted targets, fill the scientific gaps, and advance the understanding of how monitored exercise improves both HFpEF severity and the lives of Veterans with HFpEF, an adequately powered study is required to assess the role of MCT for improving CRF, HF symptoms, QOL, physical functioning, and myocardial structure and function. Identifying patients at baseline likely to respond to MCT is the subject of the second aim and will be important for maximizing VA resources and delivering timely and effective care to veterans with HFpEF. The investigators plan to enroll 4 patients to provide preliminary and feasibility data to refine the protocol for the intended study, a request of the review committee who have favorably scored the MERIT proposal.
The long-term strategy is to improve exercise tolerance and functional capacity of HFpEF patients by favorably altering cardiac structure and function and the microRNA signature driving myocardial fibrosis. The investigators intend to conduct a larger study to test the central hypothesis that monitored exercise training improves CRF, HF symptoms, QOL, and functional status in veterans with HFpEF and that the expression pattern of miRs critical for regulating fibrosis (miR-,-21,-29,-133) can identify HFpEF patients responsive to exercise training when integrated into a comprehensive predictive tool incorporating clinical characteristics along with sensitive echocardiographic measures of LV diastolic function. This project will provide feasibility and preliminary data in 4 patients for the future study.
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Inclusion criteria
New York Heart Association Class II or III HF symptoms
History of hypertension
EF≥50%
LVH confirmed by echocardiography, Cardiac CT, or Cardiac MR
Diastolic dysfunction which must include ≥2 of the following:
Ability to participate in an exercise program as determined by a research, cardiology, or primary care provider
Exclusion criteria
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Central trial contact
Kurt Barringhaus, MD, FACC, FSCAI; Amy Flowers
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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