Purpose

The VA cares for nearly one million Veterans with COPD at a cost of more than $5.5 billion annually. COPD profoundly impairs quality of life as it limits ability to work, to maintain physical exertion and to engage in social activities. Hospital-based rehab can decrease the need for inpatient and outpatient medical care and can improve exercise capacity, quality of life and, possibly, decrease mortality. Unfortunately, access to hospital-based VA rehab is insufficient and, over time, the few Veterans who attend experience progressive loss of functional gains. The investigators reason that the proposed home-based exercise program augmented by patient-tailored, RAS-enhanced music will overcome the many limitations of hospital-based rehab. Through this innovative program, the investigators expect to enhance the benefits of rehab and better maintain them over time. The easy applicability of this innovative, accessible and economical program has the potential to modify the spiraling pattern of increasing disability and reduce health-care cost and mortality in Veterans with COPD. In 2021, the investigators obtained an 'Administrative Project Modification' to the parent COPD study in which they will include patients recovering from prolonged COVID19 hospitalization. Specifically, the investigators will use the novel RAS-enhanced music exercise program developed for the parent grant in patients recovering from COVID19. The main goal of the modified proposal for COVID19 patients will be to compare the efficacy of a 12-week, home-based exercise program augmented by RAS-therapeutic music and strength training to 12-weeks usual care and strength training in patients recovering from COVID 19.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Over 18 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

COPD patients: - =< 40 yr. of age - FEV1 =< 70% - FEV1/FVC <70% - Mean SpO2 88% at peak exercise (with or without oxygen supplementation) COVID19 patients - >=18 yrs. of age - Previous hospital and/or emergency room visit for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 diagnosis. - Able to walk independently - Mean SpO2 88% at peak exercise (with or without oxygen supplementation) - Ability to hear music

Exclusion Criteria

COPD patients: - Respiratory infection/COPD exacerbation within the previous four weeks - Exercise-limiting heart disease - Congestive heart failure - i.e., New York Heart Association Class III or IV - Positive stress test or other indicators of heart disease or complaints of angina during the stress test - Exercise-limiting peripheral arterial disease - Stops walking due to intermittent claudication - Stops exercise for arthritic pain in knee or hips - Inability to walk on the treadmill - Any unforeseen illness or disability that would preclude exercise testing or training - Participation in a formal exercise program within the previous 12-weeks COVID patients: - Able to walk more than 550 meters during a standard 6-minute walk test - Exercise limiting heart disease - Complaints of angina during the 6- minute walk distance tests or other indicators of exercise-limiting heart disease - Congestive heart failure (New York Heart Association Class III or IV) - Exercise-limiting peripheral arterial disease (stops exercise due to intermittent claudication) - Stops exercise due to arthritic pain in the knee or hips (self-report) - Pregnancy

Study Design

Phase
Phase 3
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Intervention Model Description
Randomized controlled trial in which COPD patients in the intervention group and COVID19 patient in the intervention group will undergo a home-based, exercise program augmented with RAS-enhanced music while COPD patients in the control group and COVID19 patients in the control group will undergo a home-based, exercise program without music
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
Double (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Masking Description
Both investigator and outcome assessor will be blinded to patient allocation

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
RAS-music group
Home-based, exercise program augmented with rhythmically auditory stimulation enhanced music
  • Behavioral: rhythmically auditory stimulation enhanced music
    Patients in the intervention group will listen to music enhanced by rhythmic auditory stimulation while engaging in a 12-week home-based exercise program
Active Comparator
Control group
Home-based, exercise program without rhythmically auditory stimulation enhanced music
  • Behavioral: control
    Patients in the control group will not listen to music while engaging in a 12-week home-based exercise program

Recruiting Locations

More Details

NCT ID
NCT03655028
Status
Completed
Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development

Detailed Description

Rationale: In COPD, hospital-based pulmonary rehabilitation can improve symptoms, functional status, and quality of life and decrease unscheduled physician visits, emergency room visits, hospitalizations, and possibly, mortality. Despite the well documented efficacy, hospital-based rehab remains inadequate due to insufficient access, acceptance and sustainability. This has triggered a growing interest in home-based rehab programs. Patients enrolled in home-based programs, however, may exercise at low intensities to avoid dyspnea/fatigue, limiting the potential benefits of exercise training. Accordingly, it is essential to develop innovative home-based programs that decrease exercise-induced dyspnea and fatigue while ensuring sufficient exercise intensity to produce sustainable physiologic benefit. Recent data suggest that rhythmically auditory stimulation (RAS) using music may constitute such an innovative strategy. Music can diminish exercise-induced dyspnea/fatigue allowing patients to tolerate more challenging physical activity and obtain a greater benefit from rehab. Music also can induce entrainment of motor responses such as walking. The investigators thus plan to capitalize on both the sensorimotor coupling of gait with RAS-enhanced music and the mitigating effect of music over exercise-induced dyspnea/fatigue. Specifically, the investigators propose to compare the efficacy of a 12-week, home-based exercise program augmented by patient-tailored, RAS-enhanced music to a 12-week traditional home-based exercise program in patients with COPD. Hypothesis: (H1) Compared to patients randomized to a home-based, exercise program without music (control group), patients randomized to a home-based, exercise program augmented with RAS-enhanced music (intervention group) will demonstrate (H1a, primary hypothesis) greater increase in 6-minute walk distance, (H1b) greater increase in walking time on a constant-load treadmill test protocol, (H1c) reduced dyspnea during a constant-load treadmill test protocol, and (H1d) greater increases in health-related quality of life. In addition (H2), they will accumulate greater volume of physical activity (actigraphy) and (H3) will better sustain these benefits over time. Lastly (Explorative Objective), the investigators will assess the mechanistic impact physiological and psychological phenotype and clinical factors on responsiveness to rehabilitation (duration constant-load treadmill test) achieved with and without concurrent use of RAS-music. Methods: The proposed study is a randomized, controlled clinical trial in which 170 patients will be randomized into a home-based, exercise program without music or a home-based exercise program augmented with RAS-enhanced music. Patients will receive 12-weeks of home-based training per group assignment (at least three times weekly) followed by 12-weeks of follow-up to assess the sustainability of the investigators' novel intervention. Testing will be carried out at baseline and at 6, 12 and 24 weeks. Testing will include pulmonary function test, 6-minute walk tests, constant-load treadmill test, physical activity quantification, measurements of dyspnea, quality of life, and objective quantification of quadriceps dimensions (ultrasonography) and strength/fatigue (magnetic stimulation of the femoral nerve). Analysis: In the principal analysis of the primary outcome measure (6-minute walk distance) the investigators will use a mixed-model analysis that includes, treatment, time and treatment-by-time interaction terms. This model will automatically account for missing data-where missing at random is assumed. The investigators will conduct a sensitivity analysis based on the results of the mixed model analysis to determine which other assumptions regarding missing data might produce different results. One component of the sensitivity analysis will include adjustment for baseline demographic and health covariates. A linear regression model and a mixed model ANOVA will be used to assess the impact of clinical confounders (Explorative Objective). Scientific contribution: These data will provide a solid foundation to determine the physiologic impact of the rehab strategy. This innovative, practical and economical pulmonary rehabilitation strategy has the potential to create a paradigm shift in the care of the many Veterans with COPD who have no access to pulmonary rehabilitation. The above-described protocol will be also tested in patients recovering form COVID19. The investigators reason that the proposed innovative, practical, safe and economical program has the potential to create a paradigm shift in the care of the many veterans who were hospitalized with COVID19 and who have no access to physical rehabilitation. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, constant load treadmill testing could not be completed. There was concern that COVID-19 could be transmitted due to increased exposure to increased saliva associated with testing. Therefore, the objectives using constant load testing will not be reported.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.