Association of Psycho-social Traits for the Benefit of a First Respiratory Rehabilitation Course - Exploratory Study.
NCT ID: NCT04279002
Last Updated: 2021-05-18
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
134 participants
OBSERVATIONAL
2020-05-16
2021-02-24
Brief Summary
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The effectiveness of RR in improving quality of life and exercise capacity has long been demonstrated in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). More recently, its interest has been highlighted in other chronic respiratory pathologies: asthma, interstitial pathologies, cancer, restrictive pathologies or pulmonary arterial hypertension. Although the efficacy of RR has been well demonstrated on the scale of a patient population, the benefits derived on an individual scale remain unpredictable and variable from one individual to another, without knowing the major determinants of this benefit.
Empirically, RR professionals suspect an association between some psychosocial characteristics and the importance of the benefit derived by patients from RR programmes. Individual personality traits and their relationship to health status, integration into a group, interaction with other group members, and the existence of anxiety or depressive symptoms may be determinants of RR benefit. These psychosocial determinants could also play a central role in the patients' adherence to the long-term rehabilitation process.
The hypothesis being tested is that there is an association between personality traits, anxiety, depressive symptoms, social support, and the benefit of an initial course of RR and the subsequent continuation of maintenance practices.
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Detailed Description
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The effectiveness of RR in improving quality of life and exercise capacity has long been demonstrated in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). More recently, its interest has been highlighted in other chronic respiratory pathologies: asthma, interstitial pathologies, cancer, restrictive pathologies or pulmonary arterial hypertension. Although the efficacy of RR has been well demonstrated on the scale of a patient population, the benefits derived on an individual scale remain unpredictable and variable from one individual to another, without knowing the major determinants of this benefit.
Empirically, RR professionals suspect an association between some psychosocial characteristics and the importance of the benefit derived by patients from RR programmes. Individual personality traits and their relationship to health status, integration into a group, interaction with other group members, and the existence of anxiety or depressive symptoms may be determinants of RR benefit. These psychosocial determinants could also play a central role in the patients' adherence to the long-term rehabilitation process.
The hypothesis being tested is that there is an association between personality traits, anxiety, depressive symptoms, social support, and the benefit of an initial course of RR and the subsequent continuation of maintenance practices.
Main objective n°1: to describe the distribution of 17 psychosocial traits of interest in patients who had a major benefit from the initial RR stage (defined by a decrease ≥7 points of Saint George's Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) compared to patients who did not have a major benefit (defined by a decrease \<7 points of the SGRQ).
The 17 traits describe the following:
1. Personality traits
2. Existence of anxiety or depressive symptoms
3. Self-assessment of health status and the degree of control that the subject feels he or she has over the disease.
4. Felt social support
5. Interpersonal dimensions
6. General satisfaction of the subject
Secondary Objective 1 :
Describe the distribution of the 17 psychosocial traits of interest in patients who have implemented maintenance practices for at least one year after the 1st RR course (defined by paramedical care or participation in activities offered by a patient association or declaration of the maintenance of supervised physical activity), compared to patients who have not pursued such an activity or for whom this data is not available.
Secondary objective n°2: Describe the correlations between 17 psychosocial traits of interest and the variation of the following variables between the initial and final assessment of the first RR stage: SGRQ, VQ11 quality of life score, Modified Medical Research Council (mMRC) dyspnea scale, 6-minute walking distance.
Conditions
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Study Design
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COHORT
PROSPECTIVE
Study Groups
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Respiratory rehabilitation course
Patients who has completed at least one respiratory rehabilitation course at the Espace du Souffle (Tours France) within the 5 years prior to inclusion
Brief 15-question questionnaire
Questionnaire is mailed retrospectively to the respiratory rehabilitation program and aimed at targeting 17 psycho-social traits. Response time is estimated at 10 minutes
Interventions
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Brief 15-question questionnaire
Questionnaire is mailed retrospectively to the respiratory rehabilitation program and aimed at targeting 17 psycho-social traits. Response time is estimated at 10 minutes
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Completion of at least one respiratory rehabilitation course at the Espace du Souffle (Tours France) within the 5 years prior to inclusion.
* Participation Agreement (no opposition confirmed with the return of the questionnaire)
Exclusion Criteria
* Patient having expressed a refusal of contact for scientific purposes at the Espace du Souffle (Tours France)
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University Hospital, Tours
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Laurent PLANTIER, MD-PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
University Hospital, Tours
Locations
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Espace du Souffle
Tours, , France
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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2019-A02774-53
Identifier Type: OTHER
Identifier Source: secondary_id
RIPH3-RNI19/RESPIRSO
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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