4.6 Review

Exercise training in women with cardiovascular disease: Differential response and barriers - review and perspective

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PREVENTIVE CARDIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 7, Pages 779-790

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1177/2047487319838221

Keywords

Sex; cardiac rehabilitation; aerobic exercise; resistance exercise; adherence

Funding

  1. Fund for Scientific Research Flanders [1194918N, 1804315N]
  2. German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK) [81X2100238, 81X2100243]
  3. German Foundation of Heart Research [F/39/17]

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Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation is highly recommended for coronary artery disease and heart failure, but the response to exercise training varies among individuals, especially between men and women. Women rely more on fat oxidation, have lower aerobic capacities and smaller increases in cardiac function during exercise. More studies focusing on female patients are needed to tailor exercise prescription and improve outcomes.
Background Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation has a class 1A recommendation in coronary artery disease and heart failure based on its beneficial effects on mortality, morbidity and quality of life. However, the inter-individual response to exercise training is highly variable and influenced by both training and patient characteristics. Notably, men and women display a different training response, even when accounting for age, height and lean muscle mass. Most studies investigating exercise effects on various physiological outcomes focus on male patients. Because women are understudied, the scientific evidence for tailored exercise prescription in women is still limited. Methods This narrative review summarises: (a) the underlying physiological determinants of the response to exercise training in women with cardiovascular disease, in which women rely more on fat than on carbohydrate oxidation during exercise, have lower aerobic capacities and smaller increases in cardiac function during exercise; (b) the benefits and barriers of exercise in women, in whom improving cardiometabolic risk and quality of life is weighed against socioeconomic and psychological needs; and (c) the relevance of different clinical endpoints in exercise trials such as maximum oxygen uptake, morbidity, mortality, training characteristics, quality of life and metabolic or vascular endpoints. Results Finally, we provide a perspective on how to improve referral, enrolment and adherence to exercise training in women, with structured approaches to inform the referring physician as well as the patient, and offering more flexible, gender-tailored or tele/smartphone-based programmes while addressing the socioeconomic and psychological needs of the patients. This may ultimately improve the admission, adherence and outcome of exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in women.

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