An open label feasibility study of a nutrition and exercise app-based solution in cirrhosis

Can Liver J. 2024 Feb 26;7(1):5-15. doi: 10.3138/canlivj-2023-0011. eCollection 2024 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Nutrition and exercise are the mainstay of therapy for the prevention and treatment of frailty in cirrhosis. This pilot study assessed feasibility of the online delivery of an app-based semi-supervised nutrition and exercise intervention in this population.

Methods: The 11-week pilot recruited adults with cirrhosis who owned internet-connected devices. Patients were encouraged to participate in exercise sessions 3× per week including a combination of online group exercise (weekly) and home-based follow-along exercise (biweekly). They also participated in group nutrition classes (five sessions) and one-to-one exercise and nutrition check-ins delivered through the app. Primary outcome measures pertained to program feasibility: recruitment, retention, adherence, and satisfaction. Exploratory measures included physical performance (liver frailty index [LFI], 6-minute walk test [6MWT]), health behaviour domains, and quality of life.

Results: Twenty three patients completed baseline measures. Of these, 18 (72%) completed end of study measures (mean MELD-Na, 9.2; female, 44.4%). Over 70% of participants fulfilled 75% or more of the feasibility criteria. Satisfaction with the program was high (mean, 89%). Exercise program modifications were required for 17 patients to accommodate health events or abilities. Exploratory evaluation showed improvement in the LFI and the 6MWT by -0.58-units (95% CI: -0.91 to -0.25) and 46.0 m (95% CI: 22.7-69.3) respectively without changes in quality of life or health behaviour domains.

Conclusions: Outcomes demonstrate feasibility of the app-based delivery of programming with promising exploratory impact on efficacy for physical performance. Findings can guide the design of a large-scale app-based randomized controlled trials in cirrhosis.

Keywords: eHealth; liver disease; self-management; semi-supervised.

Grants and funding

This study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (app development 155456 and 164994), the Alberta Collaboration of Nutrition in Digestive Disease, Canadian National Transplant Research Program, and Nutricia Research Foundation. KPI was supported by Mitacs and unrestricted educational support from Lupin Pharma Canada and Astellas Canada.