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Improving Recovery After Critical Illness

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Malnutrition
Critical Illness
Muscle Weakness
Post Intensive Care Unit Syndrome
Interventions
Other: Group physical therapy and dietary improvements
Registration Number
NCT05182086
Lead Sponsor
Medical Centre Leeuwarden
Brief Summary

Rationale: Survival rates of patients with critical illness have increased due to improved facilities and treatment methods in the intensive care unit (ICU). However, surviving critical illness does not mean these patients are cured. In general, ICU-admission is associated with decreased physical performance and perceived physical health, impaired mental health and quality of life (QoL), reflecting in an impaired long-term recovery. Long-term health problems can partly be contributed to prolonged muscle weakness and malnutrition. Improving physical performance and perceived physical health may play a key role in boosting recovery after ICU-admission. Mono-interventions focusing on improving physical performance or nutritional intake have limited effect on long term functioning and QoL. A lifestyle intervention encompassing physical therapy and optimisation of caloric and protein intake may improve wellbeing and QoL in these patients. Previous studies found that interventions focused on mobilization and physical rehabilitation are feasible within the ICU and outpatient programs. Additionally, promising results were found in personalized healthcare and lifestyle programs for other patient groups with long-term health problems, such as cancer survivors and patients with diabetes or mental health problems. Based on this, the investigators hypothesized that a lifestyle intervention program may improve wellbeing and quality of life in long-term ICU-survivors.

Objective: Evaluation of the effects of a integrative lifestyle intervention program on physical performance and perceived physical health, mental health and health related quality of life after ICU-admission.

Study design: Randomised controlled trial Study population: Long-term ICU patients (length of stay ICU ≥48h) Intervention: The intervention group will be part of a 12-week combined lifestyle intervention encompassing group physical therapy twice a week and improvement of dietary caloric and protein intake by means of nutritional advice and, if applicable, caloric and/or protein supplementation. The control group will be subject to follow up meetings with research staff to assess physical and mental health and quality of life.

Main study parameters/endpoints: Physical functioning (RAND-36 subscale-score) at the end of the 12 week intervention period.

Nature and extent of the burden and risks associated with participation, benefit and group relatedness: All participants have two additional appointments where they participate in an interview and perform physical tests (bioimpedance measurements, ultrasound of the upper thigh muscles, hand grip strength test, Morton mobility index test, and the six-minute walking test with pulse oximetry). At baseline and week 12 of the program, all participants complete a combination of questionnaires on mental health and quality of life. The intervention group will additionally be subject to supervised group training sessions twice a week for the duration of the intervention (12 weeks). Further, two meetings with a professional about their diet will be organised. If a patient has a deficit in caloric and/or protein intake, dietary supplements with daily intake instructions will be provided. The risks and disadvantages of this intervention are minimal. However, this study requires considerable time investment and physical and mental effort. The extent of this study is crucial to clarify the effect of a combined intervention program on recovery after critical illness.

Detailed Description

Survival rates of critical illness have increased due to improved facilities and treatment methods in intensive care units. However, surviving critical illness does not automatically mean these patients are cured. In the past, the patients' survival was the measure of success in the treatment of critical illness. Over the past decades, the focus has been shifting towards the quality of life and care needs of these patients after critical illness. Survivors of critical illness frequently suffer from reduced quality of life. Health problems in the recovery period of survivors may predominantly be provoked by the physical consequences of longterm ICU-admission. The physical consequences of critical illness are mostly associated with skeletal muscle wasting during critical illness. This results in a decrease of muscle density up to two percent per day. Some long term physical health problems associated with this phenomenon are fatigue, neuropathy, neuromuscular dysfunction, and changes in bone mineral density. With regards to the long term psychosocial problems in survivors of critical illness there have been reports of short and long-term anxiety, depression and/or posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Further, during and after critical illness, patients may experience delirium and cognitive impairments. In conclusion, survivors of critical illness suffer from long term physical and mental health problems, reflecting in a reduced HRQoL.

Critical illness survivorship is a relatively new and unknown area in research and medical health care. The term post-intensive care syndrome (PICS) has been used to describe the complex aetiology of health deficits following critical illness. A recent Dutch study (the MONITOR-IC-study) with a population of 1729 ICU-patients found that an overwhelming 70 percent of ICU-patients suffer from some form of PICS one year after discharge. Data collected from the specialized post-ICU clinic of the Medical Centre Leeuwarden (MCL) illustrated that 44% of 250 patients that visited this clinic between 2012 and 2018 were unable to sufficiently recover in physical functioning one year after ICU-discharge. Unfortunately, adequate and efficient aftercare programs for ICU survivors are still lacking and patients regularly feel abandoned and insecure after discharge. Personalised healthcare and lifestyle interventions may fulfil this discontinuity in care and improve physical performance and perceived physical health in ICU-patients, followed by improvements in mental wellbeing and HRQoL. Little is known on the effects of optimizing lifestyle on longterm recovery of these patients. Promising results were found in personalised healthcare and lifestyle programs for other patient groups with long-term health problems, such as cancer survivors and patients with diabetes or mental health problems. A Cochrane review showed several exercise rehabilitation programs after ICU-discharge to be feasible, but lacking in overall effect on functional exercise capacity, or on health-related quality of life. This paucity of effect on patient-centred outcomes may be due to inconsistencies in study protocol. However, a lack of adequate nutritional support might be an equally important pitfall. ICU-survivors may experience a number of problems that can hinder their nutritional intake, including lack of appetite, problems with taste and smell perception, and swallowing issues. Recent data from a study on post-ICU nutritional intake showed that of 12 included patients, the majority did not meet their daily caloric and protein intake. Data on nutritional intake after hospital discharge is lacking, but it is likely that patients are unable to achieve these goals without professional support.

Based on this, the investigators hypothesized that, complementary to the standard post-ICU care, a combined lifestyle intervention focussed on exercise and nutritional therapy may improve physical performance and perceived physical health alongside with an improved mental wellbeing and quality of life in long-term ICU-survivors.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention groupGroup physical therapy and dietary improvementsPatients that are allocated to the intervention group will participate in a 12 week lifestyle intervention program consisting of group exercise therapy and dietary advice combined with dietary supplementation. The group exercise therapy will be guided by trained physical therapists. Patients will participate in this part of the intervention twice a week for one hour. The exercise therapy will combine cardiorespiratory with strength training. At the start of the intervention, patients will have an appointment with a nutritional scientist or doctor in which they will receive dietary advise and dietary supplements (ProSource®) to reach the advised caloric and protein intake as composed by the Dutch Centre for Nutrition (Voedingscentrum). Dietary supplements like ProSource® are extensively tested and often used as part of general practice to patients after ICU- or hospital-discharge following critical illness.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Physical functioningAfter the 12-week intervention program

Physical functioning (subscale score) measured with the Dutch 36-Item Short Form health Survey/Research and Development-36 (RAND-36) questionnaire (0-100; higher is better)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in walking distanceBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Walking distance with the six-minute walking test (m, higher is better)

Change in dietary intakeBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Dietary intake using food diary

Change in health-related quality of lifeBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Dutch 36-Item Short Form health Survey/Research and Development-36 (RAND-36) questionnaire (0-100; higher is better)

Change in fatigueBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Short Fatigue Questionnaire (Verkorte VermoeidheidsVragenlijst) (4-28, higher is worse)

Change in cognitive functioningBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Cognitive Failure Questionnaire (CFQ) (0-100; higher is worse)

Change in subjective happinessBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Happiness Index (HI) VAS-scale (0-10; higher is better)

Change in quadriceps muscle layer thicknessBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Ultrasound measures of the quadriceps (mm, higher is better)

Change in hand grip strengthBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Hand grip strength with hand-held dynamometer (kg; higher is better)

Change in mobilityBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Mobility using the morton mobility index (0-100, higher is better)

Phase angleBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Bioimpedence measurements

Change in anxiety and depression symptomsBefore and after the 12-week intervention program

Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) (0-21; higher is worse)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Medical Centre Leeuwarden

🇳🇱

Leeuwarden, Netherlands

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