Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): FWO - Research Foundation – Flanders. Exercise is a key therapy for patients across all the stages… Click to show full abstract
Type of funding sources: Public grant(s) – National budget only. Main funding source(s): FWO - Research Foundation – Flanders. Exercise is a key therapy for patients across all the stages of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). Despite being a class I recommendation, the EUROASPIRE registry showed that only a third of patients is sufficiently active, with numbers being even lower among patients with symptomatic HFpEF (stage C). Knowledge of barriers and confidence to exercise is needed to increase the uptake of exercise and a physically active lifestyle. To assess barriers to exercise and self-efficacy in patients along the continuum of HFpEF and to detect possible differences between patients in different HFpEF stages. The first 60 patients (n = 20 HFpEF stage A, 20 HFpEF stage B, 20 HFpEF stage C) from the PRIORITY randomized controlled trial (PeRsonalIzed remOtely guided preventive exeRcIse therapy for a healThY heart) were included. Barriers to exercise and self-efficacy were evaluated using the Exercise Barrier Questionnaire and the Exercise Self-Efficacy Scale. Patients with HFpEF stage C were older (72 ± 9.41 years), more likely to be female (70%) and were less physically fit (peak VO2 14.09 ± 2.58 ml/min/kg) compared to patients with HFpEF stage A (63.5 ± 9.10 years, 40% women and peak VO2 21.43 ± 4.94 ml/min/kg) and stage B (70.5 ± 5.25 years, 40% women and peak VO2 17.84 ± 5.15 ml/min/kg). As shown in Figure 1, patients with HFpEF stage C reported more barriers to exercise compared to patients with HFpEF stage A or HFpEF stage B. In particular, 50% of HFpEF stage C reported that they would not exercise when they perceived the exercise as boring (vs A:21%, B:22%), not fun (vs A: 21%, B:21%), if supervised by a bad instructor (vs A:32%, B:33%) or during holidays (vs A:26%, B:17%). Almost 40% of patients with HFpEF stage C reported that having to exercise alone would be a barrier for them (vs A:11%, B:22%). As shown in Figure 2, patients with HFpEF stage C were less confident that they 1) could overcome barriers to exercise by finding appropriate exercise resources (A:0%, B:6%, C:11%), 2) would exercise when feeling tired (A:5%, B:24%, C:28%), 3) would exercise without family support (A:5%, B:6%, C: 17%) or 4) without professional support (A:11%, B:18%, C:17%). Barriers to exercise and self-efficacy were rated differently by the 3 stages of HFpEF. Patients with more advanced stages of HFpEF experienced more challenges to be physically active.
               
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