Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
PHASE3
66 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2010-01-31
2014-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Objective: The primary objective of the current application is to assess the efficacy of aerobic exercise as an intervention to improve asthma control and quality of life in adult patients with asthma. The results of this study will provide data that will inform physicians and members of the Thoracic community about the benefits of exercise for asthma. The study will also assess potential inflammatory pathways by which exercise may elicit improvements in asthma morbidity. The results of this study should be available for the next Canadian Thoracic Society Canadian Adult Consensus Guidelines.
Methodology: The current proposal is for a study of aerobic exercise in sedentary patients with poorly controlled asthma. In addition to usual care, 52 patients will undertake supervised aerobic exercise. The exercise program will consist of 3 X 1hr sessions of supervised exercise per week for 12 weeks. The exercise routine, under medical supervision, will consist of 10 minutes of warm up exercises, 40 minutes of biking and/or walking (and eventually jogging), and 10 minutes of cool down exercises. These patients will be compared to a group of 52 patients who will follow their usual regimen, this group will be offered the exercise programme once they have completed the post assessments. For the primary outcomes (asthma control \[Asthma Control Questionnaire\], quality of life \[Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire\]) and secondary outcomes (inflammatory profile) will be evaluated at baseline and after 12 weeks (the length of the treatment). To check the efficacy of the intervention both lung function, ambulatory peak flow, and exercise tolerance data will also be collected. Repeated measures analysis of covariance-type models with time (pre, post intervention) as the within subject factor, group (exercise, usual care) as the between factor, and sex, age, and asthma severity as the covariates will be used for the primary outcome variables. To assess the potential mechanistic role of inflammation on the exercise-asthma relationship a series of regression-like GLMs will be conducted.
It is hypothesized that: (1) The exercise intervention will result in clinically and statistically significant improvements in levels of asthma control and asthma quality of life; (2) The exercise intervention will result in clinically and statistically significant improvements in inflammatory profiles, with reductions in Th2 cytokines, and activation of inflammatory cells, and increases in Th1 cytokines; and (3) Changes in inflammatory profile will be directly linked to improvements in asthma measures.
We believe that the proposal will have great clinical significance for patient management. This project will be the first to systematically evaluate the benefits of exercise training on asthma control and quality of life in adult asthma patients. We anticipate that the results of this study will form the basis for new national and international guidelines and will provide an evidence-based background for physicians to prescribe aerobic exercise for patients with asthma.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Aerobic exercise
12 weeks of supervised aerobic exercise and standard care
Aerobic exercise
12 weeks of supervised exercise, 3 x week, 1 hour sessions
Usual care
12 weeks of standard care
Usual care
Standard medical care
Interventions
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Aerobic exercise
12 weeks of supervised exercise, 3 x week, 1 hour sessions
Usual care
Standard medical care
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Sedentary (currently do less than 60 min of structured / planned physical activity per week)
* Taking at least 250 mg fluticasone equivalent per day
* On stable dose and regimen of asthma medications
* Mild to moderate symptomatic asthma as defined by an Asthma Control Questionnaire score of 1.25 or greater.
Exclusion Criteria
* Any other medical condition that confers greater illness morbidity than asthma (e.g., active cancer) which will confirmed by physician review
* FEV1 lower than 60% of predicted
* Incapable of exercising
* A BMI \> 30 kg/m2
* Unable to speak or understand either French or English
* \<18 years of age
* Patients who are currently pregnant or intend to become pregnant over the course of the study.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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McGill University Health Centre/Research Institute of the McGill University Health Centre
OTHER
Jewish General Hospital
OTHER
Centre Integre Universitaire de Sante et Services Sociaux du Nord de l'ile de Montreal
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Simon Bacon
Researcher
Principal Investigators
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Simon L Bacon, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Hopital du Sacre-Coeur de Montreal / Concordia University
Locations
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Montreal Chest Institute
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Jewish General Hospital
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Hopital du Sacre-Coeur de Montreal
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Countries
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References
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Bacon SL, Lavoie KL, Bourbeau J, Ernst P, Maghni K, Gautrin D, Labrecque M, Pepin V, Pedersen BK. The effects of a multisite aerobic exercise intervention on asthma morbidity in sedentary adults with asthma: the Ex-asthma study randomised controlled trial protocol. BMJ Open. 2013 Jun 20;3(6):e003177. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-003177.
Related Links
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PI's homepage
Research Centre, Hopital de Sacre-Coeur de Montreal's homepage
Other Identifiers
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MOP93807
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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