Non-Pharmacological Pulmonary Rehabilitation in Patients with Pneumoconiosis: A Systematic Review.

IF 2.3 Q3 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
Madina B Baurzhan, Sayagul A Kairgeldina, Venera M Almatova, Alexandr E Gulyayev, Raushan S Dosmagambetova, Kanat K Tekebayev, Karashash Absatarova, Karlygash S Absattarova
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Pneumoconiosis remains a major occupational lung disease associated with progressive respiratory impairment, reduced functional capacity, and diminished quality of life. Non-pharmacological rehabilitation has been increasingly proposed as a supportive intervention; however, evidence regarding its effectiveness remains heterogeneous.

Objective: This study aimed to systematically review and synthesize the available evidence on the effects of non-pharmacological rehabilitation interventions on functional capacity, quality of life, and psychological outcomes in patients with pneumoconiosis.

Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted in major electronic databases and grey literature sources in accordance with PRISMA 2020 guidelines. Studies evaluating non-pharmacological rehabilitation interventions in adults with pneumoconiosis were eligible for inclusion. Outcomes of interest included functional capacity, health-related quality of life, and psychological well-being. Due to methodological heterogeneity across studies, a qualitative synthesis was performed.

Results: Six studies met the predefined inclusion criteria and were included in the qualitative synthesis. The reviewed evidence suggests that structured rehabilitation interventions were associated with clinically meaningful improvements in functional capacity, particularly in structured rehabilitation programs, most consistently reflected by increases in six-minute walk distance exceeding established minimal clinically important differences in three studies. Improvements in health-related quality of life and selected psychological outcomes were also reported, although outcome measures and intervention protocols varied across studies. Significant improvements in exercise capacity, dyspnea severity, and health-related quality of life were reported.

Conclusions: Non-pharmacological rehabilitation may provide clinically meaningful benefits for patients with pneumoconiosis, based on limited and heterogeneous evidence, particularly in terms of functional capacity and quality of life. Nevertheless, the current evidence base is limited by heterogeneity in study design and outcome reporting. Further high-quality, standardized trials are needed to strengthen the evidence and guide the clinical implementation of rehabilitation programs for occupational lung diseases.

尘肺患者的非药物肺康复:一项系统综述。
背景:尘肺病仍然是一种主要的职业性肺病,与进行性呼吸障碍、功能能力下降和生活质量下降有关。非药物康复已越来越多地被提出作为一种支持干预;然而,关于其有效性的证据仍然不同。目的:本研究旨在系统回顾和综合有关非药物康复干预对尘肺患者功能能力、生活质量和心理结局影响的现有证据。方法:按照PRISMA 2020指南对主要电子数据库和灰色文献源进行系统文献检索。评估成人尘肺患者非药物康复干预的研究符合纳入条件。关注的结果包括功能能力、健康相关生活质量和心理健康。由于研究方法的异质性,进行了定性综合。结果:6项研究符合预定的纳入标准,纳入定性综合。回顾的证据表明,有组织的康复干预与功能能力的临床有意义的改善有关,特别是在有组织的康复计划中,最一致地反映在三项研究中,6分钟步行距离的增加超过了已确定的最小临床重要差异。与健康相关的生活质量的改善和选定的心理结果也有报道,尽管结果测量和干预方案在不同的研究中有所不同。据报道,运动能力、呼吸困难严重程度和健康相关生活质量均有显著改善。结论:基于有限和不同的证据,特别是在功能能力和生活质量方面,非药物康复可能为尘肺患者提供有临床意义的益处。然而,目前的证据基础受到研究设计和结果报告异质性的限制。需要进一步开展高质量、标准化的试验,以加强证据和指导职业性肺病康复方案的临床实施。
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来源期刊
Advances in respiratory medicine
Advances in respiratory medicine RESPIRATORY SYSTEM-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
90
期刊介绍: "Advances in Respiratory Medicine" is a new international title for "Pneumonologia i Alergologia Polska", edited bimonthly and addressed to respiratory professionals. The Journal contains peer-reviewed original research papers, short communications, case-reports, recommendations of the Polish Respiratory Society concerning the diagnosis and treatment of lung diseases, editorials, postgraduate education articles, letters and book reviews in the field of pneumonology, allergology, oncology, immunology and infectious diseases. "Advances in Respiratory Medicine" is an open access, official journal of Polish Society of Lung Diseases, Polish Society of Allergology and National Research Institute of Tuberculosis and Lung Diseases.
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