Device assessed activity behaviours in patients with indwelling pleural catheter: A sub‐study of the Australasian Malignant PLeural Effusion (AMPLE)‐2 randomized trial

Author:

Peddle‐McIntyre Carolyn J.12ORCID,Muruganandan Sanjeevan34ORCID,McVeigh Joanne56ORCID,Fitzgerald Deirdre B.78ORCID,Straker Leon5ORCID,Newton Robert U.129ORCID,Murray Kevin10ORCID,Lee Yun Chor Gary78ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Exercise Medicine Research Institute Edith Cowan University Joondalup Western Australia Australia

2. School of Medical and Health Sciences Edith Cowan University Joondalup Western Australia Australia

3. Department of Respiratory Medicine Northern Hospital Melbourne Victoria Australia

4. Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences University of Melbourne Melbourne Victoria Australia

5. School of Allied Health Curtin University Bentley Western Australia Australia

6. Movement Physiology Laboratory, School of Physiology University of Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

7. Respiratory Department Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital Nedlands Western Australia Australia

8. Institute for Respiratory Health & Medical School University of Western Australia Nedlands Western Australia Australia

9. School of Human Movement and Nutrition Sciences University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland Australia

10. School of Population and Global Health University of Western Australia Nedlands Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectiveDevice‐assessed activity behaviours are a novel measure for comparing intervention outcomes in patients with malignant pleural effusion (MPE). Australasian Malignant PLeural Effusion (AMPLE)‐2 was a multi‐centre clinical trial where participants with MPE treated with an indwelling pleural catheter were randomized to daily (DD) or symptom‐guided (SGD) drainage for 60‐days. Our aim was to describe activity behaviour patterns in MPE patients, explore the impact of drainage regimen on activity behaviours and examine associations between activity behaviours and quality of life (QoL).MethodsFollowing randomization to DD or SGD, participants enrolled at the lead site (Perth) completed accelerometry assessment. This was repeated monthly for 5‐months. Activity behaviour outcomes were calculated as percent of daily waking‐wear time and compared between groups (Mann–Whitney U test; Median [IQR]). Correlations between activity behaviour outcomes and QoL were examined.ResultsForty‐one (91%) participants provided ≥1 valid accelerometry assessment (DDn = 20, SGD n = 21). Participants spent a large proportion of waking hours sedentary (72%–74% across timepoints), and very little time in moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity (<1% across timepoints). Compared to SGD group, DD group had a more favourable sedentary‐to‐light ratio in the week following randomization (2.4 [2.0–3.4] vs. 3.2 [2.4–6.1]; p = 0.047) and at 60‐days (2.0 [1.9–2.9] vs. 2.9 [2.8–6.0]; p = 0.016). Sedentary‐to‐light ratio was correlated with multiple QoL domains at multiple timepoints.ConclusionPatients with MPE are largely sedentary. Preliminary results suggest that even modest differences in activity behaviours favouring the DD group could be meaningful for this clinical population. Accelerometry reflects QoL and is a useful outcome measure in MPE populations.

Funder

Cancer Council Western Australia

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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