Impact of Exercise-Based Cardiac Rehabilitation in Patients with Heart Failure (ExTraMATCH II) on Mortality and Hospitalisation: An Individual Patient Data Meta-Analysis of Randomised Trials

Rod S Taylor(University of Exeter), Sarah Walker(University of Exeter), Neil A. Smart(University of New England), Massimo Piepoli(Guglielmo da Saliceto Hospital), Fiona C Warren(University of Exeter), Oriana Ciani(University of Exeter), Christopher M. O’Connor(Clinical Research Institute), David J. Whellan(Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center), Steven J. Keteyian(Henry Ford Hospital), Andrew J.S. Coats(IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele), Constantinos H. Davos(Academy of Athens), Hasnain Dalal(University of Exeter), Kathleen Dracup(University of California, San Francisco), Lorraine S. Evangelista(University of California, Irvine), Kate Jolly(NIHR Birmingham Biomedical Research Centre), Jonathan Myers(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Robert S. McKelvie(St Joseph's Health Care), Birgitta Blakstad Nilsson(Oslo University Hospital), Claudio Passino(Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna), Miles D. Witham(University of Dundee), Gloria Y. Yeh(Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center), Ann‐Dorthe Zwisler(University of Southern Denmark)
European Journal of Heart Failure
September 26, 2018
Cited by 191Open Access
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Abstract

AIMS: To undertake an individual patient data (IPD) meta-analysis to assess the impact of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (ExCR) in patients with heart failure (HF) on mortality and hospitalisation, and differential effects of ExCR according to patient characteristics: age, sex, ethnicity, New York Heart Association functional class, ischaemic aetiology, ejection fraction, and exercise capacity. METHODS AND RESULTS: Randomised trials of exercise training for at least 3 weeks compared with no exercise control with 6-month follow-up or longer, providing IPD time to event on mortality or hospitalisation (all-cause or HF-specific). IPD were combined into a single dataset. We used Cox proportional hazards models to investigate the effect of ExCR and the interactions between ExCR and participant characteristics. We used both two-stage random effects and one-stage fixed effect models. IPD were obtained from 18 trials including 3912 patients with HF with reduced ejection fraction. Compared to control, there was no statistically significant difference in pooled time to event estimates in favour of ExCR although confidence intervals (CIs) were wide [all-cause mortality: hazard ratio (HR) 0.83, 95% CI 0.67-1.04; HF-specific mortality: HR 0.84, 95% CI 0.49-1.46; all-cause hospitalisation: HR 0.90, 95% CI 0.76-1.06; and HF-specific hospitalisation: HR 0.98, 95% CI 0.72-1.35]. No strong evidence was found of differential intervention effects across patient characteristics. CONCLUSION: Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation did not have a significant effect on the risk of mortality and hospitalisation in HF with reduced ejection fraction. However, uncertainty around effect estimates precludes drawing definitive conclusions.


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