Billany, Roseanne E; Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.;
Vadaszy, Noemi;Burns, Stephanie;Chowdhury, Rafhi;+11 more
Clinical rehabilitation,2025 Dec 30
Objectives(1) Explore the effects of a 12-week home-based rehabilitation programme on cardiorespiratory fitness in kidney transplant recipients; (2) Compare cardiorespiratory fitness parameters in kidney transplant recipients and age-sex matched healthy volunteers to aid the justification for routine rehabilitation programmes.
Design Pilot randomised controlled trial with nested case-control.
Setting Home-based rehabilitation; hospital-based outcome assessments.
Participants Pilot randomised controlled trial: 50 stable kidney transplant recipients (>1 year post-transplant) (randomised 1:1; n = 25 control and n = 25 intervention). Nested case-control: 30 kidney transplant recipients and 30 healthy volunteers.InterventionA 12-week home-based aerobic and resistance rehabilitation programme or guideline-directed care control.
Main measures Cardiorespiratory fitness measured by cardiopulmonary exercise testing.
Results Pilot randomised controlled trial: After adjusting for baseline, follow-up values were significantly greater in intervention compared to control for peak oxygen uptake (V̇O 2peak ) mL/kg/min, (+1.50, p = .03) and maximum workload (+8 W, p = .04) but not V̇O 2peak L/min or variables at the gas exchange threshold. Higher frequency of aerobic exercise sessions was associated with greater improvements in cardiorespiratory fitness ( R2 = .252, p = .040).Nested case-control: V̇O 2peak was reduced in kidney transplant recipients compared to healthy volunteers (18.81 ± 4.61 vs 24.06 ± 5.72 mL/kg/min; p < .01), as was V̇O 2 at the gas exchange threshold (11.70 ± 2.67 vs 14.47 ± 3.39 mL/kg/min; p < .01).
Conclusions A 12-week home-based rehabilitation programme induced a significant improvement in some cardiorespiratory fitness variables and higher frequency of aerobic exercise associated with greater improvements. Cardiorespiratory fitness is significantly impaired in kidney transplant recipients compared to age-sex-matched healthy volunteers. Together, these findings highlight the clinical importance of promoting aerobic exercise and the integration of rehabilitation programmes into routine care for this population.