4.7 Article

Effect of a 3-Year Lifestyle Intervention in Patients with Chronic Kidney Disease: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 431-441

Publisher

AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2021050668

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council-funded Centre for Clinical Research Excellence Vascular and Metabolic Health [GNT0455832]

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This study demonstrates that implementing a 3-year lifestyle intervention can significantly improve exercise capacity and physical activity levels in patients with chronic kidney disease. By providing care from a multidisciplinary team, including nephrologists, nurses, exercise physiologists, dietitians, etc., the lifestyle intervention group showed significant improvements at 12 months and maintained higher levels thereafter. Additionally, the intervention blunted declines in neuromuscular fitness. The results of this study highlight the importance of implementing lifestyle interventions for patients with chronic kidney disease.
Background Supervised lifestyle interventions have the potential to significantly improve physical activity and fitness in patients with CKD. Methods To assess the efficacy of a lifestyle intervention in patients with CKD to improve cardiorespiratory fitness and exercise capacity over 36 months, we conducted a randomized clinical trial, enrolling 160 patients with stage 3-4 CKD, with 81 randomized to usual care and 79 to a 3-year lifestyle intervention. The lifestyle intervention comprised care from a multidisciplinary team, including a nephrologist, nurse practitioner, exercise physiologist, dietitian, diabetes educator, psychologist, and social worker. The exercise training component consisted of an 8-week individualized and supervised gym-based exercise intervention followed by 34 months of a predominantly home-based program. Self-reported physical activity (metabolic equivalent of tasks [METs] minutes per week), cardiorespiratory fitness (peak O2 consumption [VO2peak]), exercise capacity (maximum METs and 6-minute walk distance) and neuromuscular fitness (grip strength and get-up-and-go test time) were evaluated at 12, 24, and 36 months. Results The intervention increased the percentage of patients meeting physical activity guideline targets of 500 MET min/wk from 29% at baseline to 63% at 3 years. At 12 months, both VO2peak and METs increased significantly in the lifestyle intervention group by 9.7% and 30%, respectively, without change in the usual care group. Thereafter, VO2peak declined to near baseline levels, whereas METs remained elevated in the lifestyle intervention group at 24 and 36 months. After 3 years, the intervention had increased the 6-minute walk distance and blunted declines in the get-up-and-go test time. Conclusions A 3-year lifestyle intervention doubled the percentage of CKD patients meeting physical activity guidelines, improved exercise capacity, and ameliorated losses in neuromuscular and cardiorespiratory fitness.

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