Cardiac rehabilitation for patients with obesity: lessons learned from the OPTICARE XL trial

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Abstract

Obesity is a known and commonly encountered risk factor for the development of cardiac diseases. Patients with cardiac diseases who also have obesity do not benefit optimally from standard cardiac rehabilitation (CR) programs. Exercises performed during CR are not the best fit for patients with obesity and counselling sessions often do not address their specific needs. OPTICARE XL is the first large multicentre randomised controlled trial to investigate the added value of a dedicated one-year CR program specifically designed for patients with obesity and integrated in daily practice. The short-term effects on body weight and physical activity were promising and patients with obesity experienced the program as highly desirable. However, the OPTICARE XL CR program did not show long-term added value compared with standard CR on health-related quality of life, psychosocial well-being, body weight, physical activity and physical fitness, nor on costs. The current article offers an overview of the background of this trial and discusses the most important results of the OPTICARE XL trial and the reasons behind the unanticipated long-term outcomes. Furthermore, it offers recommendations for future research and how to redesign the OPTICARE XL CR program to expand the short-term results.

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APA

den Uijl, I., Sunamura, M., Brouwers, R. M. W., Stam, H. J., Boersma, E., van den Berg-Emons, R. J. G., & ter Hoeve, N. (2024, January 1). Cardiac rehabilitation for patients with obesity: lessons learned from the OPTICARE XL trial. Netherlands Heart Journal. Bohn Stafleu van Loghum. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12471-023-01832-w

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