Issue: January 2023
Fact checked byRichard Smith

Read more

December 13, 2022
2 min read
Save

Walking 10K steps per day may slow aortic dilation in pediatric Marfan syndrome

Issue: January 2023
Fact checked byRichard Smith
You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

A 6-month intervention with an exercise target of 10,000 steps per day may slow aortic root dilation in pediatric patients with Marfan syndrome, according to study data published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

Perspective from Shaine A. Morris, MD, MPH

“Artic root dissection remains the most life-threatening complication of Marfan syndrome,” Elif Seda Selamet Tierney, MD, pediatric cardiologist at Stanford Medicine Children’s Health and professor of pediatrics at Stanford University, and colleagues wrote.

Group of People Walking
A 6-month intervention with an exercise target of 10,000 steps per day may slow aortic root dilation in pediatric patients with Marfan syndrome.
Source: Adobe Stock

For this study, Tierney and colleagues enrolled 24 patients with Marfan syndrome aged 8 to 19 years in a 6-month physical activity intervention of 10,000 steps per day, counted via activity tracker (Garmin). The control arm included 15 age-matched patients with Marfan syndrome.

Background in a Marfan syndrome mouse model

“In our recent published report using a well-established mouse model of Marfan syndrome that carries a missense mutation in the gene encoding for fibrillin-1 protein ... we showed that daily mild aerobic exercise (55%-65% maximal oxygen consumption) can block progression of aortic root aneurysm in mice, while significantly improving aortic wall elasticity and elastin fiber structural integrity,” the researchers wrote. “In this study, we investigated if these results could be translated to pediatric patients with Marfan syndrome.”

Researchers measured aortic root dimension and arterial stiffness at baseline and 6 months. Z scores for all aortic root measurements were calculated with the Boston Children’s Hospital’s z score website.

Participants were excluded if they had preexisting ventricular dysfunction or a history of aortic surgery.

In addition, two participants failed to return for testing after the interventions period and another two received non-study related injuries that temporarily affected their ability to adhere to the intervention.

Exercise and aortic dilation in Marfan syndrome

Accelerometer data indicated that nearly three-quarters of participants had sedentary lifestyles at baseline.

The average number of daily steps in the intervention arm was 7,709 steps per day (median, 7,267) and the activity tracker was worn for a median of 92.8% of the study intervention.

At baseline, there were no difference in aortic root z scores or stiffness between the intervention and control arms.

After the intervention period ended, researchers observed no differences in any of the testing indices in the intervention arm compared with baseline.

Aortic root dimension rate of change per year was 0.13 cm per year among controls compared with 0.01 cm per year in the intervention group (P = .17). Aortic root z score rate of change per year was 0.008 among controls compared with a rate of 0.24 in the intervention group (P = .01), according to the study.

Aortic stiffness rate of change per year was 3.83 among controls compared with 0.37 in the intervention group (P = .25).

“We demonstrated that a simple physical activity intervention of 10,000 steps per day for 6 months was feasible in this population and has the potential to decrease the aortic root dilation rate,” the researchers wrote. “Because the focus has been more on exercise restrictions for patients with Marfan syndrome rather than promotion of exercise, these results might help shift the paradigm in this patient population. Our preliminary findings warrant further clinical studies to carefully evaluate the impact of exercise, possibly different types of exercise, on aortic root dilation in this patient population, probably best achieved by a multicenter randomized exercise intervention.”

Reference: