Multi-Center Study of Clinical and Inflammatory Outcomes in Intensive Cardiac Rehabilitation and Traditional Cardiac Rehabilitation Programs
NCT06424119
Summary
The goal of this prospective study is to evaluate whether the Intensive Cardiac Rehabilitation (ICR) program provides incremental benefits over the Traditional Cardiac Rehabilitation (TCR) program, defined by readmission costs. The study aims to confirm: * That ICR is associated with better outcomes than TCR, defined as lower readmission costs, lower incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), and improvement in biomarkers, epigenetic markers, and inflammatory markers. * The addition of food to the ICR program will further improve these outcomes. ICR-eligible participants * Will be randomized into one of three groups: (1) ICR 72 session program with home-delivered C2life® supplied food, (2) ICR 72 session without C2life® supplied food, or (3) TCR 36 session program without C2life supplied food * Biometric measurements and laboratory measurements will be performed at entry into the rehab intervention, discharge from rehab intervention, and at 6 months after discharge. * Epigenetic measurements will be performed at admission and discharge from the rehab intervention
Eligibility
Inclusion Criteria: * All patients eligible for an Intensive Cardiac Rehabilitation (ICR) Program at each of the three study sites outline below, stratified by one of the following qualifying cardiovascular events, including myocardial infarction (STEMI and NSTEMI), angioplasty and stents, coronary artery bypass, surgical or percutaneous valve repair or replacement, and stable congestive heart failure with reduced ejection fraction of 35% or less. Exclusion Criteria: * Anticipated life expectancy of under 2 years * Any co-morbidity that would limit participation in the study.
Conditions2
Locations3 sites
Michigan
1 siteNorth Carolina
1 siteTennessee
1 siteBrowse More Trials
Trial data from ClinicalTrials.gov. Trial status and eligibility can change — verify directly with the study contact or on ClinicalTrials.gov.
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NCT06424119