Telehealth-supervised exercise in systemic lupus erythematosus: A pilot study

Author:

Frade Stephanie1ORCID,O’Neill Sean2,Walsh Samantha3,Campbell Chloe1,Greene David3,Bird Stephen P.1,Cameron Melainie1

Affiliation:

1. School of Health and Medical Sciences, Faculty of Health and Engineering and Sciences, University of Southern Queensland, Ipswich, Australia

2. Department of Rheumatology Institute of Bone and Joint Research, Kolling Institute, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

3. School of Behavioural and Health Sciences Australian Catholic University, Strathfield, Australia

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.

Funder

Healthy work options

University of Southern Queensland

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rheumatology

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