CLEVER: Greater gains
seen with supervised exercise than stenting in patients with peripheral
artery disease
In patients on standard therapy for peripheral
artery disease (PAD), adding a supervised treadmill exercise program
improved walking ability significantly better than stenting, according
to late-breaking research presented at the American Heart Association's
Scientific Sessions 2011.
Patients on either additional therapy improved walking ability
better than standard therapy alone, which is home walking and cilostazol,
a medicine that improves blood flow to the legs.
The study, called CLaudication: Exercise Vs Endoluminal Revascularization
Study (CLEVER), is also published in Circulation: Journal of the
American Heart Association.
Patients and physicians have treated claudication with either supervised
exercise, medications, or angioplasty and stent placement. Until
now, however, the relative effectiveness of each type of treatment
was unclear. The use of stents has increased, and exercise is not
often used.
Investigators randomized patients to home walking plus cilostazol
or to the same approach plus one of two other interventions: supervised
treadmill exercise or placement of a stent to reduce narrowing in
the iliac artery. Stents are most effective for PAD when used at
this anatomic site.
Six months after study enrollment, patients in the supervised exercise
program significantly increased their treadmill walking time, as
did those who received stents. In contrast, patients who only exercised
at home showed little improvement.
The average walking time in each group improved by:
- 5.8 minutes ─ supervised exercise + cilostazol;
- 3.7 minutes ─ stents + cilostazol;
- 1.2 minutes ─ home exercise + cilostazol.
"The evidence shows that those who receive the usual medical
care do not enjoy a substantial improvement in their symptoms at
all," said Timothy Murphy, M.D., study lead author and professor
in the diagnostic-imaging department at the Warren Alpert Medical
School of Brown University in Providence, R.I.
Patients in both the supervised exercise and stent groups scored
better on a variety of quality of life measurements. Surprisingly,
however, patients in the stent group described a better quality
of life compared to both the supervised- or home-exercise programs.
The reasons for the dissociation between treadmill walking and quality
of life improvements are not clear.
"It is important to note that both the supervised exercise
and stent treatments provided substantially more benefit than usual
home-based medical care, and both are proven to be effective treatments,"
Murphy said. "I think that both of these therapies offer substantial
advantages over the usual care."
Exercise treatment improved leg function and symptoms, but not
blood flow to the leg.
"Perhaps this should not be surprising at all," said
Alan T. Hirsch, M.D., chair of the study and professor of medicine,
epidemiology and community health in the Lillehei Heart Institute
of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. "Leg function
can improve tremendously in almost any individual without any increase
in blood flow past major artery blockages, as walking efficiency
is dependent on much more than one blocked artery. Exercise is known
to improve leg function and symptoms in numerous proven ways. Microscopic
blood vessels that supply leg muscles and the nerves and muscles
themselves all become much more efficient."
The study enrolled 111 PAD patients, average age 64 years, from
29 centers in the United States. Sixty-one percent were male, and
80 percent were Caucasian. More than half smoked and nearly one-fourth
had diabetes. Smoking and diabetes are powerful risk factors for
PAD.
Researchers began the study in February 2007 and this report described
the primary 6-month study outcome. All patients will continue to
receive follow-up for a full 18 months to evaluate more long-term
outcomes, quality of life and cost-effectiveness. The study will
conclude in Jan. 2012.
Co-authors are Don Cutlip, M.D.; Judy Regensteiner, Ph.D.; Emile
Mohler, M.D.; Suzanne Goldberg, R.N.; Joe Massaro, Ph.D.; David
Cohen, M.D.; Matt Reynolds, M.D.; Beth Lewis, Ph.D.; Joselyn Cerezo,
M.D.; Niki Oldenburg and Claudia Thum.
The National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute funded the study.
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