Abstract

Maintenance of physical activity following pulmonary rehabilitation remains a challenge for patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The objectives of this study were to identify patterns of endurance activity after completion of pulmonary rehabilitation and to characterise people who succeed and those who have difficulty maintaining endurance activity. In a longitudinal study embedded within a randomised clinical trial, 206 individuals with COPD underwent a 3-month pulmonary rehabilitation programme. Weekly duration of endurance activity was assessed at 4, 6, 8 and 12 months after the start of rehabilitation. Trajectory modelling was used to determine the most common patterns of activity during the post-rehabilitation phase from 4-12 months. Three distinct patterns were identified, two of which indicated difficulty in maintaining endurance activity: 61 individuals reported a high activity level at 4 months (2.7 h·week(-1)) and stayed high; 114 individuals started at a low activity level (mean 1.0 h·week(-1)) and stayed low; and 31 individuals started high (3.0 h·week(-1)) and declined. The low activity group was characterised by more severe disease and greater respiratory impairment. The high and declined group had less severe disease and respiratory impairment, but reported greater barriers to exercise. Pulmonary rehabilitation should include interventions aimed at minimising barriers, in order to induce long-term behaviour change.

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