Restoring Energy With Sub-symptom Threshold Optimized Rehabilitation Exercise for Long COVID

NCT ID: NCT06172803

Last Updated: 2024-06-06

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

4 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2023-10-01

Study Completion Date

2024-01-15

Brief Summary

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The overall goal of this study is to find out if rehabilitation exercise can help people who have long COVID. Participants will be randomized by chance to receive either aerobic exercise or breathing exercise (combined with stretches). Participants will be guided and supported in completing a tailored, 6-week home exercise program to be performed 5 - 6 days a week, prescribed and supervised by rehabilitation therapists. Participants will perform breathing exercises, which will be supervised by an occupational therapist. The focus of Aim 1 is to determine feasibility of implementing RESToRE in long COVID.

Detailed Description

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Long COVID, also known as post-acute coronavirus 2019 syndrome, is characterized by debilitating, multi-organ symptoms beyond 3 months from the onset of acute illness, consistent with autonomic nervous system dysfunction. Prevalence estimate of long COVID is 10 - 20% of survivors of COVID-19, representing about 10-20 million global long-term cases. Multi-organ, autonomic-related symptoms of long COVID, such as exhausting fatigue and post-exertional malaise, are remarkably like post-concussion syndrome and chronic fatigue syndrome. Post-exertional malaise, likely a cardinal symptom of long COVID, is "an exacerbation of some or all of an individual's symptoms after physical or cognitive exertion, or orthostatic stress", significantly impacting functional ability and quality of life. This abnormal response to exertion is often described as "flu-like" and typically includes brain fog. Common "long hauler" symptoms reported in our cohort of patients with long COVID (n=30) were fatigue (\>70%), symptoms of dysautonomia (80%, primarily orthostasis), "brain fog" (100%), and new or worse mood symptoms (90%), especially anxiety. Experience from Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS-CoV-1) notably showed that survivors suffered chronic fatigue and mental illnesses 4 years after acute viral illness. Rehabilitation studies in coronavirus disease (Covid-19) have targeted sub-acute lung sequelae of Covid-19 rather than post-acute sequalae of long COVID. This study addresses the World Health Organization's urgent call for rehabilitation research for long COVID.

The investigators identified blunted rise in heart rate (HR), called chronotropic intolerance, during maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) in 19 adults with long COVID. Chronotropic intolerance is defined as inability to meet 80% of age-derived heart rate, HR peak. Group HR peak mean (SD) was 69 (7.7) % predicted. This blunted rise in HR is associated with post-exertional malaise, similar to the pattern of symptoms in post-concussion syndrome and chronic fatigue syndrome, which share underlying autonomic nervous system (ANS) dysfunction and impaired cerebral blood flow regulation. The investigators identified a need for more comprehensive and precise measurement of post-exertional malaise in long COVID. In a randomized controlled trial (RCT), the investigators also tested a sub-symptom threshold aerobic exercise program, focused on treating persisting symptoms of post-concussion syndrome. The investigators found this aerobic exercise program reduced persistent symptoms of exercise intolerance, fatigue, and dysautonomia more quickly in subjects compared with a control group of stretching exercises (n=103).

Informed by research in post-concussion syndrome, the investigators are proposing a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) to study the feasibility of an exercise program called, Restoring Energy with Sub-symptom Threshold Aerobic Rehabilitation Exercise (RESToRE). The central hypothesis is that restoration of autonomic control through RESToRE will resolve persisting symptoms of long COVID faster compared with placebo-like stretching and breathing exercise (without rise in HR). RESToRE is an interdisciplinary, hybrid 8-week intervention consisting of three core components: (1) home-based aerobic exercise, of 20 minutes most days, with HR monitoring at 70-80% of the HR threshold at which symptoms increase, (2) phone-based motivational exercise coaching, 20 minutes weekly; and (3) supervised exercise with an exercise physiologist, twice-monthly in the clinic. Key to RESToRE's feasibility is its telehealth component, including Apple watch and app for HR fidelity monitoring, PhysiTrack's exercise library app, and LifeData dashboard for real-time post-exertional malaise and remote exercise monitoring. Our long-term goal is to establish an efficacious exercise program to speed recovery from long COVID.

Conditions

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Long Covid19 Exercise Intolerance Riboflavin-Responsive

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Participants Investigators

Study Groups

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RESToRE

Participants will receive RESToRE, an interdisciplinary, hybrid 8- week intervention.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Restoring Energy with Sub-symptom Threshold Aerobic Rehabilitation Exercise

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

8 week exercise program. 20 minutes of home aerobic exercise most days, phone- based motivational exercise coaching and supervised exercise with our team exercise physiologist.

Light Stretching Exercise

The control group will receive 8-week, attention-matched, stretching and breathing exercises, supervised by a rehabilitation clinician.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Light Stretching/Breathing Exercises

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

The control group will receive 8-week, attention-matched, stretching and breathing exercises, supervised by a rehabilitation clinician (via 20-minute weekly video visits). Exercises performed 5 days a week will not increase HR significantly. Participants will record and track their HR with Apple watch and app; like RESToRE, fidelity of treatment will be objectively measured using HR data.

Interventions

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Restoring Energy with Sub-symptom Threshold Aerobic Rehabilitation Exercise

8 week exercise program. 20 minutes of home aerobic exercise most days, phone- based motivational exercise coaching and supervised exercise with our team exercise physiologist.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Light Stretching/Breathing Exercises

The control group will receive 8-week, attention-matched, stretching and breathing exercises, supervised by a rehabilitation clinician (via 20-minute weekly video visits). Exercises performed 5 days a week will not increase HR significantly. Participants will record and track their HR with Apple watch and app; like RESToRE, fidelity of treatment will be objectively measured using HR data.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Other Intervention Names

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RESToRE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* English speaking
* Age of 21 years or older
* Diagnosis of long COVID
* Score \>0 on energy, daily activities, sleep, chest tightness, or breathlessness on COPD Assessment Test or self-reported brain fog
* Able to use a smartphone.

Exclusion Criteria

* \>70years old due to risk of sarcopenia
* Frailty defined as gait speed \<1 m/s on 4- Meter Gait Speed (4MGS) test due to falls risk
* Diagnosis of chronic cardiac or pulmonary disease, including atrial fibrillation, ME/CFS, post-concussion syndrome, chronic Lyme disease, lupus, or sarcopenia comorbidities (due to PEM and/or fatigue)
* Medical history of ICU stay for COVID-19 illness due to risk of post-ICU syndrome and increased rehabilitation needs
* Inability to ambulate independently and safely without a walking aide
* Diagnosis of dementia or neurodegenerative disease, multiple sclerosis, or rheumatoid arthritis with associated cognitive dysfunction or fatigue.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

70 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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New York University

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Columbia University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Principal Investigators

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Anna Norweg, PhD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Columbia University

Locations

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Columbia University Irving Medical Center

New York, New York, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

Other Identifiers

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AAAU4504 (Aim 1)

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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