Effectiveness and Safety of Hybrid Comprehensive Telerehabilitation in Women with Heart Failure—A Subanalysis of the TELEREH-HF Randomized Clinical Trial
Ewa Piotrowicz, Renata Główczyńska, Dominika Szalewska, Ilona Kowalik, Piotr Orzechowski, Sławomir Pluta, Zbigniew Kalarus, Anna Mierzyńska, Izabela Jaworska, Robert Irzmański, Ryszard Piotrowicz

TL;DR
This study found that hybrid telerehabilitation safely improves physical capacity and quality of life in women with heart failure.
Contribution
The study provides new evidence on the effectiveness and safety of hybrid telerehabilitation specifically in women with heart failure.
Findings
Hybrid telerehabilitation improved peak oxygen consumption and workload duration in women with heart failure.
Quality of life scores improved significantly more in the telerehabilitation group compared to usual care.
No major adverse events occurred in either group, indicating the safety of the intervention.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Despite the known benefits of cardiac rehabilitation, it remains underutilized among women. In particular, little is known about the effectiveness of hybrid comprehensive telerehabilitation (HCTR) in women with heart failure (HF). The purpose of this study was to assess effectiveness and safety of HCTR in women with HF. Methods: This analysis formed part of the TELEREH-HF multicenter, randomized trial that enrolled 850 HF patients (NYHA I-III, LVEF ≤ 40%). Patients were randomized 1:1 to HCTR plus usual care (UC) or UC alone. Patients underwent either HCTR (1 week in hospital and 8 weeks at home, five times weekly) or UC with observation. The effectiveness of HCTR was assessed by changes in peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak), workload duration (t) in cardiopulmonary exercise test and quality of life (QoL) based on Medical Outcome Survey Short Form 36 Questionnaire…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Health and Mental Health · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Heart Failure Treatment and Management
