Telehealth-supervised exercise in systemic lupus erythematosus: A pilot study
Article
| Article Title | Telehealth-supervised exercise in systemic lupus erythematosus: A pilot study |
|---|---|
| ERA Journal ID | 16577 |
| Article Category | Article |
| Authors | Frade, Stephanie, O'Neill, Sean, Walsh, Samantha, Campbell, Chloe, Greene, David, Bird, Stephen P. and Cameron, Melainie |
| Journal Title | Lupus |
| Journal Citation | 32 (4), pp. 508-520 |
| Number of Pages | 13 |
| Year | 2023 |
| Publisher | SAGE Publications Ltd |
| Place of Publication | United Kingdom |
| ISSN | 0961-2033 |
| 1477-0962 | |
| Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1177/09612033231157073 |
| Web Address (URL) | https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/09612033231157073 |
| Abstract | Objectives: To explore the feasibility and effectiveness of telehealth-supervised exercise for adults with Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Methods: This was a non-randomised controlled pilot trial comparing telehealth-supervised exercise (8 weeks, 2 days/week, 45 min, moderate intensity) plus usual care with usual care alone. Mixed methods were used to assess change in fatigue (FACIT-fatigue), quality of life (SF36), resting fatigue and pain (11-point scale), lower body strength (five-time sit-to-stand) and endurance (30 s sit-to-stand), upper body endurance (30 s arm curl), aerobic capacity (2 min step test), and experience (survey and interviews). Group comparison was performed statistically using a two-sample T-test or Mann–Whitney U-test. Where known, we used MCID or MCII, or assumed a change of 10%, to determine clinically meaningful change within groups over time. Interviews were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis. Results: Fifteen female adults with SLE were included (control group n = 7, exercise group n = 8). Statistically significant differences between groups, in favour of the exercise intervention, were noted for SF36 domain emotional well-being (p = 0.048) and resting fatigue (p = 0.012). There were clinically meaningful improvements over time for FACIT-fatigue (+6.3 ± 8.3, MCID >5.9), SF36 domains physical role functioning (+30%), emotional role functioning (+55%), energy/fatigue (+26%), emotional well-being (+19%), social functioning (+30%), resting pain (−32%), and upper body endurance (+23%) within the exercise group. Exercise attendance was high (98%, 110/112 sessions); participants strongly agreed (n = 5/7, 71%) or agreed (n = 2/7, 29%) they would do telehealth-supervised exercise again and were satisfied with the experience. Four themes emerged: (1) ease and efficiency of exercising from home, (2) value of live exercise instruction, (3) challenges of exercising at home, and (4) continuation of telehealth-supervised exercise sessions. Conclusion: Key findings from this mixed-method investigation suggest that telehealth-supervised exercise was feasible for, and well-accepted by, adults with SLE and resulted in some modest health improvements. We recommend a follow-up RCT with more SLE participants. |
| Keywords | autoimmune disease; COVID-19; exercise; systemic lupus erythematosus; telehealth |
| Related Output | |
| Is part of | Exercise for people with systemic sclerosis or systemic lupus erythematosus |
| ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 420302. Digital health |
| Byline Affiliations | School of Health and Medical Sciences |
| University of Sydney | |
| Australian Catholic University |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/yy234/telehealth-supervised-exercise-in-systemic-lupus-erythematosus-a-pilot-study
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| Telehealth-supervised exercise in systemic lupus erythematosus.pdf | ||
| License: CC BY 4.0 | ||
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