Clinical and cost-effectiveness of SPACE for COPD delivered as a pulmonary rehabilitation maintenance programme: a randomised controlled trial

HOUCHEN-WOLLOFF, Linzy, HONG, Annabel, ALQAHTANI, Khaled, GERLIS, Charlotte, GARDINER, Nikki, BARRADELL, Amy, NOLAN, Claire Marie, MAN, William, RICHARDSON, Mathew, KHAN, Amir, GUMBER, Anil, SZCZEPURA, Ala and SINGH, Sally J (2026). Clinical and cost-effectiveness of SPACE for COPD delivered as a pulmonary rehabilitation maintenance programme: a randomised controlled trial. Thorax. [Article]

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Abstract

Introduction:

The benefits of pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) decline after 6–12 months. Previous studies of maintenance in the literature have been labour-intensive and concentrated on secondary care healthcare utilisation only. We aimed to investigate whether Self-management Programme of Activity, Coping and Education (SPACE) for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a light-touch self-management programme, was clinically and cost-effective following PR.

Methods:

We conducted a prospective, multicentre, assessor-blind randomised controlled trial. Patients with COPD were randomised 1:1 to usual care (control) or SPACE. The intervention included a home-based manual and four facilitated group sessions, delivered over 12 months. Primary outcome: Endurance Shuttle Walking Test at 12 months. Secondary outcomes: maximal exercise capacity, mood, patient activation, physical activity, healthcare costs and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL).

Results:

116 participants were recruited (October 2019–June 2022). Baseline characteristics: SPACE (65% male, aged 71.8 years, median Medical Research Council (MRC) 3, mean pack years 41.1, mean body mass index (BMI) 29.1), control (51% male, aged 71.8 years, median MRC 3, mean pack years 44.5, mean BMI 28.3). SPACE completion rate=83% and intervention fidelity (assessed via checklist) was excellent. No statistically significant differences at 12 months for primary and secondary outcomes. Economic analysis at 12 months shows a positive HRQoL difference between groups of 0.0871 quality adjusted life years (QALY) and reduced National Health Service (NHS) costs of £139 per participant, driven primarily by a reduction in general practitioner visits in favour of SPACE.

Conclusions:

Endurance exercise tolerance was maintained in both groups. The programme improved HRQoL at 12 months in the intervention group (above control) and was cost-effective, driven by reduced primary care costs.
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