High Intensity Interval Training in Fibrotic Interstitial Lung Disease

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2019
Interstitial lung disease (ILD) is a chronic lung condition characterized by scarring of lung tissue. This stiffening of the lungs impairs breathing and reduces the amount of oxygen being delivered throughout the body limiting the ability to perform daily and physical activity. Around two‐thirds of people with ILD have fibrotic ILD (fILD), a type of ILD, which typically has worse impairment and disability than other types of ILD. There is no cure for these conditions, although there are two new pharmacological therapies that slow the decline in lung function in Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis (IPF), the most common type of fILD. These treatments however do not provide improvement in breathlessness, exercise capacity or health‐related quality of life (HRQoL). Exercise training, or Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR), has shown to be effective at improving exercise tolerance and HRQoL in ILD. The investigators recently demonstrated that, at a group level, exercise training exerts a positive effect across varying subtypes of ILD, including IPF, the most rapidly progressive of all the fILDs. However less than half of those with IPF who undertook the exercise training achieved meaningful improvements in exercise capacity. In addition, a large proportion of people with IPF were unable to keep up with the recommended exercise training level, often due to excessive dyspnoea or desaturation. This suggests the current exercise training strategies used in PR, which were adopted from guidelines for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), may not provide the optimal exercise stimuli for fILD. High intensity interval training (HIIT), which is short bouts of high intensity exercise regularly interspersed with periods of rest or light exercise, may be an alternate exercise training option for people with fILD. However, it is unknown whether this kind of exercise training achieves superior benefits to the traditional model of PR. The aim of this project is to determine whether HIIT is better than the current method of continuous exercise training at moderate intensity, in improving exercise capacity, breathlessness and HRQoL in people with fILD. A total 130 people with fILD will be recruited. The trial will be conducted at four hospital sites across Australia. People who agree to take part in the study will be randomly allocated into two groups. Group 1 will undergo the traditional PR model of moderate intensity continuous exercise training and group 2 will undergo HIIT. Participants in both groups will participate in exercise training twice weekly for eight weeks. The participants will be monitored continuously during exercise by an experienced physiotherapist or exercise physiologist. At the beginning and the end of the eight weeks of exercise training, and six months later, participants will undergo measurements of exercise capacity and health status. This study will determine whether HIIT is effective, providing an important exercise training strategy that can be readily used for people with fILD to achieve positive benefits from PR.
Epistemonikos ID: 0be49a88b9722b36d7b3cb9c8cef4f07db0d211d
First added on: May 21, 2024