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UnknownNCT05474079

Exercise Training & Statins for Cardiovascular Health

The Effects of Supervised Exercise Training in the Primary Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease in Stain-Users and Non Statin-Users

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
80 (estimated)
Sponsor
Cardiff Metropolitan University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) refers to any condition that affects the heart and/or blood vessels (e.g. heart attack, stroke) and is the leading cause of death and disability worldwide. Regular exercise and statin therapy are widely recommended as frontline prevention strategies to reduce CVD risk. Recent changes to National Health Service (NHS) healthcare guidelines state that even individuals with a relatively low risk of CVD (≥10% risk score) should take a statin. When prescribed after a heart attack or stroke, both exercise and statins reduce the risk of a CVD-related death by \~25%, with some evidence to suggest that the combination of these therapies may offer additive cardiovascular protection. However, far less is known about the combined effects of exercise and statin therapy in primary CVD prevention (i.e. before a CVD event). Poor blood vessel function represents the earliest stage of CVD, which can be measured with ultrasound at different regions of the body (limbs, brain, heart) to sensitively detect early CVD risk. Regular exercise provides a variety of cardiovascular benefits and has a direct therapeutic effect on blood vessel function. In contrast, statin therapy primarily reduces CVD risk by lowering cholesterol, which may also improve blood vessel function. Although both therapies can separately reduce CVD risk, the interaction between exercise training and statin therapy on blood vessel function has never been directly compared in the setting of primary prevention, and it's currently unknown whether a combination of both therapies offers additional cardiovascular benefit. Therefore, the main aims of this study are to (i) investigate the effect of supervised exercise training on blood vessel function (limbs, brain, heart) in individuals with a CVD-risk score of ≥10% and (ii) examine whether these exercise effects differ in individuals taking a statin compared to those not taking a statin.

Detailed description

Over 340,000 people in Wales live with cardiovascular disease (CVD). It causes 28% of all annual deaths and costs the Welsh NHS £469 million per year (British Heart Foundation, 2019). Physical inactivity causes a third of all CVD cases and only 53% of Welsh adults currently meet the recommended minimum physical activity guidelines (Statistics for Wales, 2019). Accordingly, Wales is the most physically inactive nation in the UK with one of the highest rates of CVD. Regular exercise is widely recommended by GPs as a frontline prevention strategy to reduce CVD-risk. Similarly, statins are also routinely prescribed as part of primary healthcare across the UK to lower cholesterol levels and reduce CVD-risk. Recent changes to NHS primary healthcare guidelines state that even individuals with a relatively low risk of CVD (10-year CVD-risk score ≥10%; QRISK3) should take a statin. When prescribed after a heart attack or stroke, both exercise and statins reduce the risk of a CVD-related death by \~25%; some evidence suggests that the combination of these therapies may offer additive cardiovascular protection. However, far less is known about the combined effects of exercise and statin therapy in primary CVD prevention. Sensitive ultrasound techniques can be used to examine vascular, cerebrovascular and cardiac structure and function to provide a comprehensive overview of cardiovascular health. Poor vascular function represents the earliest stage of CVD and is more sensitive at detecting CVD risk than traditional risk factors. Regular exercise provides a variety of cardiovascular benefits and has a direct therapeutic effect on vascular function. In contrast, statin therapy primarily reduces CVD-risk by lowering cholesterol, which may also improve vascular function. Although both therapies can separately reduce CVD risk, the interaction between exercise training and statin therapy on vascular function has never been directly compared in the setting of primary prevention; and it is currently unknown whether a combination of both therapies offers additional cardiovascular benefit. This study will utilise a comprehensive series of cutting-edge vascular, cerebrovascular and cardiac ultrasound techniques to examine the effectiveness of exercise and statin therapy as primary CVD prevention strategies. If results demonstrate that exercise training provides similar cardiovascular benefits to statin therapy, and/or the combination of these preventive strategies offer additive benefit, this could have considerable implications on primary prevention healthcare recommendations.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERModerate intensity exercise trainingThe exercise training program will consist of individually tailored, progressive moderate-intensity aerobic exercise. Exercise training will comprise of a combination of treadmill, cross-trainer and cycle ergometer-based exercise. Exercise will progressively increase in both intensity and duration throughout the course of the intervention. Participants will begin the intervention with 30 minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise at 40% HRR three times per week for the initial 4 weeks. From week 4, exercise intensity will increase to 50% HRR, and at week 6 the duration of each session will increase to 45 minutes. From week 8, participants will exercise at an intensity of 60% HRR for 45 minutes, and from week 10, this will increase to five sessions per week.

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-20
Primary completion
2025-01-01
Completion
2026-01-01
First posted
2022-07-26
Last updated
2024-02-07

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05474079. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.