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A Detailed Analysis of Cardiac Rehabilitation on 180-Day All-Cause Hospital Readmission and Mortality

Brian D. Duscha, Leanna M. Ross, Andrew Hoselton, Lucy W. Piner, Carl F. Pieper, William E. Kraus

2023Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PURPOSE: Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is endorsed for coronary artery disease (CAD), but studies report inconsistent findings regarding efficacy. The objective of this study was to determine whether confounding factors, potentially contributing to these heterogeneous findings, impact the effect of CR on all-cause readmission and mortality. METHODS: Patients (n = 2641) with CAD, CR eligible, and physically able were identified. Electronic medical records were inspected individually for each patient to extract demographic, clinical characteristic, readmission, and mortality information. Patients (n = 214) attended ≥1 CR session (CR group). Survival was considered free from: all-cause readmission; or composite outcome of all-cause readmission or death. Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for demographics, comorbidities, and discharge criteria, were used to determine HR with 95% CI and to compare 180-d survival rates between the CR and no-CR groups. RESULTS: During 180 d of follow-up, 12.1% and 18.7% of the CR and non-CR patients were readmitted to the hospital. There was one death (0.5%) in the CR group, while 98 deaths (4.0%) occurred in the non-CR group. After adjustment for age, sex, race, depression, anxiety, dyslipidemia, hypertension, obesity, smoking, type 2 diabetes, and discharge criteria, the final model revealed a significant 42.7% reduction in readmission or mortality risk for patients who attended CR (HR = 0.57: 95% CI, 0.33-0.98; P = .043). CONCLUSIONS: Regardless of demographic characteristics, comorbidities, and cardiovascular discharge criteria, the risk of 180-d all-cause readmission or death was markedly decreased in patients who attended CR compared with those who did not.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineDyslipidemiaConfoundingCoronary artery diseaseInternal medicineRehabilitationDiabetes mellitusProportional hazards modelCause of deathDepression (economics)DemographicsAcute coronary syndromeMyocardial infarctionMedical recordObesityPhysical therapyDiseaseDemographyMacroeconomicsSociologyEndocrinologyEconomicsCardiac Health and Mental HealthCardiovascular and exercise physiologyStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery