Abstract

Background: Although cardiovascular rehabilitation (CR) is well accepted in general, CR-attendance and delivery still considerably vary between the European countries. Moreover, clinical and prognostic effects of CR are not well established for a variety of cardiovascular diseases. Methods: The guidelines address all aspects of CR including indications, contents and delivery. By processing the guidelines, every step was externally supervised and moderated by independent members of the “Association of the Scientific Medical Societies in Germany” (AWMF). Four meta-analyses were performed to evaluate the prognostic effect of CR after acute coronary syndrome (ACS), after coronary bypass grafting (CABG), in patients with severe chronic systolic heart failure (HFrEF), and to define the effect of psychological interventions during CR. All other indications for CR-delivery were based on a predefined semi-structured literature search and recommendations were established by a formal consenting process including all medical societies involved in guideline generation. Results: Multidisciplinary CR is associated with a significant reduction in all-cause mortality in patients after ACS and after CABG, whereas HFrEF-patients (left ventricular ejection fraction <40%) especially benefit in terms of exercise capacity and health-related quality of life. Patients with other cardiovascular diseases also benefit from CR-participation, but the scientific evidence is less clear. There is increasing evidence that the beneficial effect of CR strongly depends on “treatment intensity” including medical supervision, treatment of cardiovascular risk factors, information and education, and a minimum of individually adapted exercise volume. Additional psychologic interventions should be performed on the basis of individual needs. Conclusions: These guidelines reinforce the substantial benefit of CR in specific clinical indications, but also describe remaining deficits in CR-delivery in clinical practice as well as in CR-science with respect to methodology and presentation.

Highlights

  • Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent the leading cause of premature death and disability in Europe and other countries all over the world

  • The available data from various sources to mirror cardiac rehabilitation (CR)-delivery in clinical practice in German speaking countries are incomplete. These data allow the following conclusions: Patients with coronary artery disease represent the vast majority of patients participating in cardiovascular rehabilitation followed by patients after heart valve repair

  • After acute coronary syndrome (STEMI, NSTEMI or unstable angina pectoris) patients are recommended to participate in cardiac rehabilitation (CR)

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Summary

Introduction

Cardiovascular diseases (CVD) represent the leading cause of premature death and disability in Europe and other countries all over the world. CR-quality has been graded to be high in a recent global survey, this adjudication needs to be questioned, as content, volume and intensity of CR-delivery are not binding in many countries and substantially vary even in between industrial, high income countries [5,7,8,9]. Until now, these deficits have not satisfactorily been solved, despite the availability of several scientific guidelines and expert position papers [5,10,11,12,13,14,15]. Clinical and prognostic effects of CR are not well established for a variety of cardiovascular diseases

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