Abstract

Introduction: Many center-based cardiac rehabilitation programs were forced to close during the pandemic resulting in a programmatic shift to delivering cardiac rehabilitation remotely in the home-based setting. This study examined sex differences in the change of exercise frequency and exercise capacity in patients participating in home-based cardiac rehabilitation (HBCR) during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: Retrospective cohort study of 567 HBCR patients between March 2020 and May 2021. Patients who completed the Duke Activity Status Index questionnaire before and after HBCR were included. We calculated the number of reported exercise days/ week, exercise min/day, and VO 2 peak estimated. Patients were divided into two groups according to sex (Male/Female). Continuous data are described as mean±SD and baseline data compared with a two-sample t-test. The delta change from pre-post between groups also are compared with a two-sample t-test. Results: Of 567 HBCR patients, 118 patients completed both pre and post HBCR questionnaires (Male, n=82, 66±12 yo vs Female, n=36, 65±12 yo, p=0.80). There were no differences between groups for baseline exercise days/week or exercise min/day pre HBCR (4.0±2.8 vs 4.1±3.0 days, p=0.87; 22±20 vs 18±20 min, p=0.33); however, VO 2 peak at baseline HBCR was higher in males than females (22.3±8.1 vs 18.9±5.9 ml/kg/min, p<0.05). Both groups improved exercise days/week (4.0±2.8 to 5.7±1.5 vs 4.1±3.0 to 5.7±1.4 days, p<0.05 for both), exercise min/day (22±20 to 40±15 vs 18±20 to 37±21 min, p<0.05 for both), and VO 2 peak (22.3±8.1 to 27.8±8.0 vs 18.9±5.9 to 22.7±6.5, ml/kg/min, p<0.05 for both). In addition, there was no significant difference for the delta change of the three outcomes between groups (1.7±2.7 vs 1.6±2.5 days; 18±19 vs 19±18 min; 5.5±6.5 vs 3.8±4.5 ml/min/kg, p>0.05 for all). Conclusions: Female patients entering HBCR during the COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated lower exercise capacity compared to males; however, both female and male patients increased exercise frequency (days/week and min/day) and exercise capacity (estimated VO 2 peak) similarly after attending HBCR during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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