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Protocol - Exercise Capacity/Six-Minute Walk Test

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Description

The six-minute walk test is timed and requires minimal technical resources to measure the distance that a patient can quickly walk on a flat, hard surface in a period of 6 minutes (the six-minute walk distance, 6MWD). This measure has been shown to be a reproducible, objective indicator of functional capacity and is a part of the multicomponent BODE index (body mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnea, and exercise capacity) that correlates with survival. It is important to emphasize that in patients with more severe disease, this is a test of maximum exercise performance; subjects should receive standardized instructions and be encouraged to push themselves to achieve maximal distance.

Specific Instructions

The Sickle Cell Disease Curative Therapies Working Group notes that poor exercise capacity in sickle cell disease patients assessed by the six-minute walk has been associated with pulmonary artery hypertension and diastolic dysfunction (Sachdev et al., 2012). Additionally, the six-minute walk distance has been positively correlated with higher hemoglobin concentration and negatively correlated with pain (Carbonell-Baeza et al., 2013, Focht et al., 2005, Latorre-Roman et al., 2014, Sachdev et al., 2019, St Lezin et al., 2019).

Availability

Available

Protocol

CONTRAINDICATIONS

Absolute contraindications for the Six-Minute Walk Test (6MWT) include the following: unstable angina during the previous month and myocardial infarction during the previous month. Relative contraindications include a resting heart rate of more than 120, a systolic blood pressure of more than 180 mm Hg, and a diastolic blood pressure of more than 100 mm Hg.

Patients with any of these findings should be referred to the physician ordering or supervising the test for individual clinical assessment and a decision about the conduct of the test. The results from a resting electrocardiogram done during the previous 6 months should also be reviewed before testing. Stable exertional angina is not an absolute contraindication for a 6MWT, but patients with these symptoms should perform the test after using their antiangina medication, and rescue nitrate medication should be readily available.

SAFETY ISSUES

1. Testing should be performed in a location where a rapid, appropriate response to an emergency is possible. The appropriate location of a crash cart should be determined by the physician supervising the facility.

2. Supplies that must be available include oxygen, sublingual nitroglycerine, aspirin, and albuterol (metered dose inhaler or nebulizer). A telephone or other means should be in place to enable a call for help.

3. The technician should be certified in cardiopulmonary resuscitation with a minimum of Basic Life Support by an American Health Association-approved cardiopulmonary resuscitation course. Advanced cardiac life support certification is desirable. Training, experience, and certification in related health care fields (registered nurse, registered respiratory therapist, certified pulmonary function technician, etc.) are also desirable. A certified individual should be readily available to respond if needed.

4. Physicians are not required to be present during all tests. The physician ordering the test or a supervising laboratory physician may decide whether physician attendance at a specific test is required.

5. If a patient is on chronic oxygen therapy, oxygen should be given at their standard rate or as directed by a physician or a protocol.

Reasons for immediately stopping a 6MWT include the following:

(1) Chest pain,

(2) Intolerable dyspnea,

(3) Leg cramps,

(4) Staggering,

(5) Diaphoresis, or

(6) Pale or ashen appearance.

(7) SpO2 <80% when continuous oximetry is available.

Technicians must be trained to recognize these problems and the appropriate responses. If a test is stopped for any of these reasons, the patient should sit or lie supine as appropriate depending on the severity or the event and the technician’s assessment of the severity of the event and the risk of syncope. The following should be obtained based on the judgment of the technician: blood pressure, pulse rate, oxygen saturation, and a physician evaluation. Oxygen should be administered as appropriate.

Technical Aspects of the Six-Minute Walk Test

Location

The 6MWT should be performed indoors, along a long, flat, straight, enclosed corridor with a hard surface that is seldom traveled. If the weather is comfortable, the test may be performed outdoors. The walking course should be 30 m in length with no bends or pedestrian traffic. A 100-ft hallway is, therefore, suggested. Shorter course length, not less than 20 meters can be considered per protocol in individual sites. The length of the corridor should be marked every 3 m. The turnaround points should be marked with a cone (such as an orange traffic cone). A starting line, which marks the beginning and end of each 60-m lap, should be marked on the floor using brightly colored tape.

Rationale. A shorter corridor requires patients to take more time to reverse directions more often, reducing the 6MWD. Most studies have used a 30-m corridor, but some have used 20- or 50-m corridors. A recent multicenter study found no significant effect of the length of straight courses ranging from 50 to 164 ft, but patients walked farther on continuous (oval) tracks (mean 92 ft farther).

The use of a treadmill to determine the 6MWD might save space and allow constant monitoring during the exercise, but the use of a treadmill for 6-minute walk testing has been limited and should not be assumed to have similar test characteristics with corridor testing.

REQUIRED EQUIPMENT

1. Countdown timer (or stopwatch)

2. Mechanical lap counter

3. Two small cones to mark the turnaround points

4. A chair that can be easily moved along the walking course

5. Worksheets on a clipboard

6. A source of oxygen

7. Sphygmomanometer

8. Telephone

9. Automated electronic defibrillator

PATIENT PREPARATION

1. Comfortable clothing should be worn.

2. Appropriate shoes for walking should be worn.

3. Patients should use their usual walking aids during the test (cane, walker, etc.).

4. The patient’s usual medical regimen should be continued.

5. A light meal is acceptable before early morning or early afternoon tests.

6. Patients should not have exercised vigorously within 2 hours of beginning the test.

MEASUREMENTS

1. Repeat testing should be performed about the same time of day to minimize intraday variability.

2. A "warm-up" period before the test should not be performed.

3. The patient should sit at rest in a chair, located near the starting position, for at least 10 minutes before the test starts. During this time, check for contraindications, measure pulse and blood pressure, and make sure that clothing and shoes are appropriate. Complete the first portion of the worksheet (see Table 1).

TABLE 1. 6MWT WORKSHEET

The following elements should be present on the 6MWT worksheet and report:

Lap counter: __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __

Patient name: ____________________ Patient ID# ___________

Walk # ______ Tech ID: _________ Date: __________

Gender: M F Age: ____ Race: ____ Height: ___ft ____in, ____ meters

Weight: ______ lbs, _____kg Blood pressure: _____ / _____

Medications taken before the test (dose and time): __________________

Supplemental oxygen during the test: No Yes, flow ______ L/min, type _____

Baseline

End of Test

Time ___:___ ___:___

Heart Rate _____ _____

Dyspnea ____ ____ (Borg scale)

Fatigue ____ ____ (Borg scale)

SpO2 ____ % ____%

Time ___:___ ___:___

Heart Rate _____ _____

Dyspnea ____ ____ (Borg scale)

Fatigue ____ ____ (Borg scale)

SpO2 ____ % ____%

Stopped or paused before 6 minutes? No Yes, reason: _______________

Other symptoms at end of exercise: angina dizziness hip, leg, or calf pain

Number of laps: ____ (X 60 meters) + final partial lap: _____ meters =

Total distance walked in 6 minutes: ______ meters

Predicted distance: _____ meters Percent predicted: _____%

Tech comments:

Interpretation (including comparison with a preintervention 6MWD):

4. Pulse oximetry is optional. If it is performed, measure and record baseline heart rate and oxygen saturation (SpO2) and follow manufacturer’s instructions to maximize the signal and to minimize motion artifact. Make sure the readings are stable before recording. Note pulse regularity and whether the oximeter signal quality is acceptable. The rationale for measuring oxygen saturation is that although the distance is the primary outcome measure, improvement during serial evaluations may be manifest either by an increased distance or by reduced symptoms with the same distance walked. Continuous recording of oximetry is recommended but not necessary. Exercise-induced desaturation provides additional test information and is associated with worse disease prognosis. The technician is discouraged from walking with the patient to observe the SpO2, however if this is necessary he/she should walk slightly behind the patient so as not to set the pace. If worn during the walk, the pulse oximeter must be lightweight (less than 2 pounds), battery powered, and held in place (perhaps by a "fanny pack") so that the patient does not have to hold or stabilize it and so that stride is not affected. Many pulse oximeters have considerable motion artifact that prevents accurate readings during the walk.

5. Have the patient stand and rate their baseline dyspnea and overall fatigue using the Borg scale (see Table 2 for the Borg scale and instructions).

6. Set the lap counter to zero and the timer to 6 minutes. Assemble all necessary equipment (lap counter, timer, clipboard, Borg scale, worksheet) and move to the starting point.

7. Instruct the patient as follows:

"The object of this test is to walk as far as possible for 6 minutes. You will walk back and forth in this hallway. Six minutes is a long time to walk, so you will be exerting yourself. You will probably get out of breath or become exhausted. You are permitted to slow down, to stop, and to rest as necessary. You may lean against the wall while resting, but resume walking as soon as you are able. You will be walking back and forth around the cones. You should pivot briskly around the cones and continue back the other way without hesitation. Now I’m going to show you. Please watch the way I turn without hesitation." Demonstrate by walking one lap yourself. Walk and pivot around a cone briskly. "Are you ready to do that? I am going to use this counter to keep track of the number of laps you complete. I will click it each time you turn around at this starting line. Remember that the object is to walk AS FAR AS POSSIBLE for 6 minutes, but don’t run or jog. Start now or whenever you are ready."

TABLE 2. THE BORG SCALE

0 Nothing at all

0.5 Very, very slight (just noticeable)

1 Very slight

2 Slight (light)

3 Moderate

4 Somewhat severe

5 Severe (heavy)

6

7 Very severe

8

9

10 Very, very severe (maximal)

This Borg scale should be printed on heavy paper (11 inches high and perhaps laminated) in 20-point type size. At the beginning of the 6-minute exercise, show the scale to the patient and ask the patient this: "Please grade your level of shortness of breath using this scale." Then ask this: "Please grade your level of fatigue using this scale." At the end of the exercise, remind the patient of the breathing number that they chose before the exercise and ask the patient to grade their breathing level again. Then ask the patient to grade their level of fatigue, after reminding them of their grade before the exercise.

8. Position the patient at the starting line. You should also stand near the starting line during the test. Do not walk with the patient. As soon as the patient starts to walk, start the timer.

9. Do not talk to anyone during the walk. Use an even tone of voice when using the standard phrases of encouragement. Watch the patient. Do not get distracted and lose count of the laps. Each time the participant returns to the starting line, click the lap counter once (or mark the lap on the worksheet). Let the participant see you do it. Exaggerate the click using body language, like using a stopwatch at a race.

After the first minute, tell the patient the following (in even tones): "You are doing well. You have 5 minutes to go."

When the timer shows 4 minutes remaining, tell the patient the following: "Keep up the good work. You have 4 minutes to go."

When the timer shows 3 minutes remaining, tell the patient the following: "You are doing well. You are halfway done."

When the timer shows 2 minutes remaining, tell the patient the following: "Keep up the good work. You have only 2 minutes left."

When the timer shows only 1 minute remaining, tell the patient: "You are doing well. You have only 1 minute to go."

Do not use other words of encouragement (or body language to speed up).

If the patient stops walking during the test and needs a rest, say this: "You can lean against the wall if you would like; then continue walking whenever you feel able." Do not stop the timer. If the patient stops before the 6 minutes are up and refuses to continue (or you decide that they should not continue), wheel the chair over for the patient to sit on, discontinue the walk, and note on the worksheet the distance, the time stopped, and the reason for stopping prematurely.

When the timer is 15 seconds from completion, say this: "In a moment I’m going to tell you to stop. When I do, just stop right where you are and I will come to you."

When the timer rings (or buzzes), say this: "Stop!" Walk over to the patient. Consider taking the chair if they look exhausted. Mark the spot where they stopped by placing a bean bag or a piece of tape on the floor.

10. Posttest: Record the postwalk Borg dyspnea and fatigue levels and ask this: "What, if anything, kept you from walking farther?"

11. If using a pulse oximeter, measure SpO2 and pulse rate from the oximeter and then remove the sensor.

12. Record the number of laps from the counter (or tick marks on the worksheet).

13. Record the additional distance covered (the number of meters in the final partial lap) using the markers on the wall as distance guides. Calculate the total distance walked, rounding to the nearest meter, and record it on the worksheet.

14. Congratulate the patient on good effort and offer a drink of water.

QUALITY ASSURANCE

Sources of Variability

There are many sources of 6MWD variability (see Table 3). The sources of variability caused by the test procedure itself should be controlled as much as possible. Identical conditions are essential in serial testing to determine disease progression or in assessing outcome following an intervention. This is done by following the standards found in this document and by using a quality-assurance program.

Practice Tests

A practice test is recommended for six minute walk testing to reduce test variability and thus to increase the responsiveness of a test to an intervention. A practice test is less critical for patient stratification in cohort studies or as a measure of prognosis. If a practice test is done, wait for at least 1 hour before the second test and report the highest 6MWD as the patient’s 6MWD baseline.

Rationale. Two tests performed before and again following an intervention can increase power and thus decrease sample size by up to 27%; and thus is strongly encouraged in interventional trials powered on 6MWD as the primary outcome measure. The 6MWD is only slightly higher for a second 6MWT performed a day later. The mean reported increase ranges from 0 to 17%. A multicenter study of 470 highly motivated patients with severe COPD performed two 6MWTs 1 day apart, and on average, the 6MWD was only 66 ft (5.8%) higher on the second day. Performance (without an intervention) usually reaches a plateau after two tests done within a week. The training effect may be due to improved coordination, finding optimal stride length, and overcoming anxiety.

Technician Training and Experience

Technicians who perform 6MWTs should be trained using the standard protocol and then supervised for several tests before performing them alone. They should also have completed cardiopulmonary resuscitation training.

Rationale. One multicenter study of older people found that after correction for many other factors, two of the technicians had mean 6MWDs that were approximately 7% lower than the other two sites.

Encouragement

Only the standardized phrases for encouragement (as specified previously here) must be used during the test.

Rationale. Encouragement significantly increases the distance walked. Reproducibility for tests with and without encouragement is similar. Some studies have used encouragement every 30 seconds, every minute, or every 2 minutes. We have chosen every minute and standard phrases. Some studies have instructed patients to walk as fast as possible. Although larger mean 6MWDs may be obtained thereby, we recommend that such phrases not be used, as they emphasize initial speed at the expense of earlier fatigue and possible excessive cardiac stress in some patients with heart disease.

TABLE 3. 6MWD SOURCES OF VARIABILITY

Factors reducing the 6MWD

Shorter height

Older age

Higher body weight

Female sex

Impaired cognition

A shorter corridor (more turns)

Pulmonary disease (COPD, asthma, cystic fibrosis, interstitial lung disease)

Cardiovascular disease (angina, MI, CHF, stroke, TIA, PVD, AAI)

Musculoskeletal disorders (arthritis, ankle, knee, or hip injuries, etc.)

Factors increasing the 6MWD

Taller height (longer legs)

Male sex

High motivation

A patient who has previously performed the test

Medication for a disabling disease taken just before the test

Oxygen supplementation in patients with exercise-induced hypoxemia

Definition of abbreviations: COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; 6MWD 6-minute walking distance.

Supplemental Oxygen

If oxygen supplementation is needed during the walks and serial tests are planned (after an intervention other than oxygen therapy), then during all walks by that patient oxygen should be delivered in the same way with the same flow. If the flow must be increased during subsequent visits due to worsening gas exchange, this should be noted on the worksheet and considered during interpretation of the change noted in 6MWD. The type of oxygen delivery device should also be noted on the report: for instance, the patient carried liquid oxygen or pushed or pulled an oxygen tank, the delivery was pulsed or continuous, or a technician walked behind the patient with the oxygen source (not recommended). Measurements of pulse and SpO2 should be made after waiting at least 10 minutes after any change in oxygen delivery.

Rationale. For patients with COPD or interstitial lung disease, oxygen supplementation increases the 6MWD. Carrying a portable gas container (but not using it for supplemental oxygen) reduced the mean 6MWD by 14% in one study of patients with severe respiratory disability, but using the container to deliver supplemental oxygen during the exercise increased the mean 6MWD by 20-35%.

Medications

The type of medication, dose, and number of hours taken before the test should be noted.

Rationale. Significant improvement in the distance walked, or the dyspnea scale, after administration of bronchodilators has been demonstrated in patients with COPD, as well as cardiovascular medications in patients with heart failure.

INTERPRETATION

6MWD can be used in stratifying populations, in determining an individual patient’s risk, or as an outcome in a clinical trial to determine mean change after an intervention or responder rate (proportion of subjects achieving a clinically meaningful improvement). With a good quality-assurance program, with patients tested by the same technician using identical methodology, and using practice tests, short-term reproducibility of the 6MWD is excellent. It is not known whether it is best for clinical purposes to express change in 6MWD as (1) an absolute value or (2) a percentage change. Expression as a change in % predicted is discouraged because of significant variation in current prediction equations. Until further research is available, we recommend that change in 6MWD be expressed as an absolute value (e.g., the patient walked 50 m farther).

A statistically significant mean increase in 6MWD in a group of study participants is often much less than a clinically significant increase in an individual patient. Recent studies have determined a clinically meaningful response to 6MWD to be approximately 30 meters. Comparison between the proportion of individuals achieving this meaningful difference between study groups should be a primary or secondary outcome measure when 6MWT is used. The 6MWD was more responsive to deterioration than to improvement in heart failure symptoms. Additional research is necessary to determine whether clinically meaningful deterioration differs from clinically meaningful improvement within different disease populations.

Reported Mean Changes in 6MWD After Interventions

Supplemental oxygen (4 L/min) during exercise in patients with COPD or interstitial lung disease increased mean 6MWD by approximately 95 m (36%) in one study. Patients with COPD in a study of the effects of exercise and diaphragmatic strength training experienced a mean increase in 6MWD of 50 m (20%). Lung volume reduction surgery in patients with very severe COPD has been reported to increase 6MWD by a mean of 55 m (20%). Cardiac rehabilitation in patients referred with various heart diseases increased 6MWD by a mean of 170 m (15%) in a recent study. In 25 older patients with heart failure, an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor medication (50 mg captopril per day) improved 6MWD a mean of 64 m (39%) compared with a mean increase of only 8% in those receiving a placebo. 6MWD on the other hand has been shown to be poorly responsive to bronchodilator therapy in COPD patients. Further, because walking distance has a ceiling effect in relatively normal or mildly impaired populations, the test may be poorly responsive to interventions in mildly impaired patient populations.

Interpreting Single Measurements of Functional Status

Optimal reference equations from healthy population-based samples using standardized 6MWT methods are not yet available. In one study, the median 6MWD was approximately 580 m for 117 healthy men and 500 m for 173 healthy women. A mean 6MWD of 630 m was reported by another study of 51 healthy older adults. Differences in the population sampled, type and frequency of encouragement, corridor length, and number of practice tests may account for reported differences in mean 6MWD in healthy persons. Age, height, weight, and sex independently affect the 6MWD in healthy adults; therefore, these factors should be taken into consideration when interpreting the results of single measurements made to determine functional status. We encourage investigators to publish reference equations for healthy persons using the previously mentioned standardized procedures.

6MWD of less than 350 meters has been shown to significantly increase the risk of mortality or hospitalization at 6 and 12 months. A low 6MWD, however is nonspecific and nondiagnostic. When the 6MWD is reduced, a thorough search for the cause of the impairment is warranted. The following tests may then be helpful: pulmonary function, cardiac function, ankle-arm index, muscle strength, nutritional status, orthopedic function, and cognitive function.

Conclusions

The 6MWT is a useful measure of functional capacity targeted at people with at least moderately severe impairment. The test has been widely used for preoperative and postoperative evaluation and for measuring the response to therapeutic interventions for pulmonary and cardiac disease. These guidelines provide a standardized approach to performing the 6MWT. The committee hopes that these guidelines will encourage further research into the 6MWT and allow direct comparisons among different studies.

Personnel and Training Required

Technicians who perform six-minute walk tests should be trained using the standard protocol and then supervised for several tests before performing them alone. They should also have completed cardiopulmonary resuscitation training.

Equipment Needs

1. Countdown timer (or stopwatch)

2. Mechanical lap counter

3. Two small cones to mark the turnaround points

4. A chair that can be easily moved along the walking course

5. Worksheets on a clipboard

6. A source of oxygen

7. Sphygmomanometer

8. Telephone

9. Automated electronic defibrillator

10. Supplemental oxygen

Requirements
Requirement CategoryRequired
Major equipment No
Specialized training No
Specialized requirements for biospecimen collection No
Average time of greater than 15 minutes in an unaffected individual No
Mode of Administration

Physical Measurement

Lifestage

Adult, Senior

Participants

Ambulatory adults

Selection Rationale

This protocol is supported by the American Thoracic Society. These guidelines were generated by a team of pulmonary experts based on a comprehensive MEDLINE literature search from 1970 to 2014.

Language

English

Standards
StandardNameIDSource
caDSR Form PhenX PX090602 - Exercise Capacity Sixminute Walk Test 6914245 caDSR Form
Derived Variables

None

Process and Review

The Expert Review Panel #6 (ERP 6) reviewed the measures in the Respiratory domain.

Guidance from ERP 6 includes:

• Updated protocol

Back-compatible: there are changes to the Data Dictionary, previous version of the Data Dictionary and Variable mapping in Toolkit archive (link).

Protocol Name from Source

Six-Minute Walk Test (6MWT)

Source

Holland, A. E., Spruit, M. A., Troosters, T., Puhan, M. A., Pepin, V., Saey, D., … Singh, S. J. (2014). An official European Respiratory Society/ American Thoracic Society technical standard: Field walking tests in chronic respiratory disease. European Respiratory Journal, 44(6), 1428-1446.

General References

Carbonell-Baeza, A., Ruiz, J. R., Aparicio, V. A., Ortega, F. B., & Delgado-Fernández, M. (2013). The 6-minute walk test in female fibromyalgia patients: relationship with tenderness, symptomatology, quality of life, and coping strategies. Pain Management Nursing, 14(4), 193-199.

Casanova, C., Cote, C., Marin, J. M., Pinto-Plata, V., de Torres, J. P., Aguirre-Jaime, A., … Celli, B. R. (2008). Distance and oxygen desaturation during the 6-min walk test as predictors of long-term mortality in patients with COPD. Chest, 134(4), 746-752.

Celli, B., Tetzlaff, K., Criner, G., Polkey, M. I., Sciurba, F., Casaburi, R., … Rennard, S. (2016). The 6-minute-walk distance test as a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease stratification tool. Insights from the COPD Biomarker Qualification Consortium. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 194(12), 1483-1493.

Eisner, M. D., Iribarren, C., Yelin, E. H., Sidney, S., Katz, P. P., Ackerson, L., … Blanc, P. D. (2008). Pulmonary function and the risk of functional limitation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. American Journal of Epidemiology, 167(9), 1090-1101.

Focht, B. C., Rejeski, W. J., Ambrosius, W. T., Katula, J. A., & Messier, S. P. (2005). Exercise, self-efficacy, and mobility performance in overweight and obese older adults with knee osteoarthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 53(5), 659-665.

Garcia-Rio, F., Lores, V., Mediano, O., Rojo, B., Hernanz, A., Lopez-Collazo, E., & Alvarez-Sala, R. (2009). Daily physical activity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is mainly associated with dynamic hyperinflation. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 180(6), 506-512.

Holland, A. E., Spruit, M. A., Troosters, T., Puhan, M. A., Pepin, V., Saey, D., … Singh, S. J. (2014). An official European Respiratory Society/ American Thoracic Society technical standard: Field walking tests in chronic respiratory disease. European Respiratory Journal, 44(6), 1428-1446.

Latorre-Román, P., Santos-Campos, M., Heredia-Jimenez, J., Delgado-Fernández, M., & Soto-Hermoso, V. (2014). Analysis of the performance of women with fibromyalgia in the six-minute walk test and its relation with health and quality of life. The Journal of Sports Medicine and Physical Fitness, 54(4), 511-517.

Mascolo, M. C., & Truwit, J. D. (2003). Role of exercise evaluation in restrictive lung disease: New insights between March 2001 and February 2003. Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine, 9(5), 408-410.

Nixon, P. A., Joswiak, M. L., & Fricker, F. J. (1996). A six-minute walk test for assessing exercise tolerance in severely ill children. Journal of Pediatrics, 129(3), 362-366.

Puhan, M. A., Chandra, D., Mosenifar, Z., Ries, A., Make, B., Hansel, N. N., … Sciurba, F. (2011). The minimal important difference of exercise tests in severe COPD. European Respiratory Journal, 37, 784-790.

Sachdev, V., Kato, G. J., Gibbs, J. S., Barst, R. J., Machado, R. F., Nouraie, M., Hassell, K. L., Little, J. A., Schraufnagel, D. E., Krishnamurti, L., Novelli, E. M., Girgis, R. E., Morris, C. R., Rosenzweig, E. B., Badesch, D. B., Lanzkron, S., Castro, O. L., Taylor, J. G., 6th, Hannoush, H., Goldsmith, J. C., … Walk-PHASST Investigators (2011). Echocardiographic markers of elevated pulmonary pressure and left ventricular diastolic dysfunction are associated with exercise intolerance in adults and adolescents with homozygous sickle cell anemia in the United States and United Kingdom. Circulation, 124(13), 1452-1460.

Sachdev, V., Hsieh, M., Jeffries, N., Noreuil, A., Li, W., Sidenko, S., Hannoush, H., Limerick, E., Wilson, D., Tisdale, J., & Fitzhugh, C. (2019). Reversal of a rheologic cardiomyopathy following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation for sickle cell disease. Blood Advances, 3(19), 2816-2824.

Singh, S. J., Puhan, M. A., Andrianopoulos, V., Hernandes, N. A., Mitchell, K. E., Hill, C. J., Lee, A. L., Camillo, C. A., Troosters, T., Spruit, M. A., Carlin, B. W., Wanger, J., Pepin, V., Saey, D., Pitta, F., Kaminsky, D. A., McCormack, M. C., MacIntyre, N., Culver, B. H., Sciurba, F. C., Revill, S. M., Delafosse, V., Holland, A. E. (2014). An official systematic review of the European Respiratory Society/American Thoracic Society: measurement properties of field walking tests in chronic respiratory disease. European Respiratory Journal, 44, 1447-1478.

St Lezin, E., Karafin, M. S., Bruhn, R., Chowdhury, D., Qu, L., Bialkowski, W., Merenda, S., DAndrea, P., McCalla, A. L., Anderson, L., Keating, S. M., Stone, M., Snyder, E. L., Brambilla, D., Murphy, E. L., Norris, P. J., Hilton, J. F., Spencer, B. R., Kleinman, S., Carson, J. L., … NHLBI Recipient Epidemiology and Donor Evaluation Study (REDS)-III Program (2019). Therapeutic impact of red blood cell transfusion on anemic outpatients: the RETRO study. Transfusion, 59(6), 1934-1943. https://doi.org/10.1111/trf.15249

Protocol ID

90602

Variables
Export Variables
Variable Name Variable IDVariable DescriptiondbGaP Mapping
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Angina_Myocardial_Infarction
PX090602010000 Did the subject experience unstable angina more
during the previous month and myocardial infarction during the previous month? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Available_Oxygen_Nitroglycerine_Aspirin_Albuterol
PX090602040000 Are the following supplies available during more
testing? Oxygen, sublingual nitroglycerine, aspirin, albuterol show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Baseline_Dyspnea_Rating
PX090602440100 How would you rate the baseline dyspnea more
using the Borg scale of the patient? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Blood_Pressure_Pulse_Rate_Oxygen_Saturation_Physician_Evaluation
PX090602070200 If the test was stopped, were the following more
assessments performed on the patient? Blood pressure, pulse rate, oxygen saturation, physician evaluation show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Date
PX090602170000 Date N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Exercise_Stop_Six_Minutes
PX090602370100 Stopped or paused before 6 minutes N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Exercise_Stop_Six_Minutes_Reason
PX090602370200 Stopped or paused before 6 minutes; reason: N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Exercise_Symptoms
PX090602380000 Other symptoms at end of exercise N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Lap_Counter
PX090602120000 Lap counter N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Overall_Fatigue_Rating
PX090602440200 How would you rate the overall fatigue using more
the Borg scale of the patient? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Age
PX090602190000 Age N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Baseline_Dyspnea
PX090602290000 Baseline - Dyspnea (Borg Scale) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Baseline_Fatigue
PX090602300000 Baseline - Fatigue (Borg Scale) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Baseline_Heart_Rate
PX090602280000 Baseline - Heart rate N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Baseline_Oxygen_Saturation
PX090602310000 Baseline - SpO2 N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Baseline_Time
PX090602270000 Baseline - Time N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Blood_Pressure_Diastolic
PX090602240200 Blood pressure (diastolic) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Blood_Pressure_Systolic
PX090602240100 Blood pressure (systolic) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Chest_Pain_Dyspnea_Leg_Cramps_Staggering_Diaphoresis_Pale_Oxygen_Concentration
PX090602070100 Is the patient experiencing chest pain, more
intolerable dyspnea, leg cramps, staggering, diaphoresis, have pale or ashen appearance, or have SpO2 < 80% when continuous oximetry is available? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Chronic_Oxygen_Therapy
PX090602060000 Is the patient on chronic oxygen therapy? N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_End_Dyspnea
PX090602340000 End of test - Dyspnea (Borg Scale) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_End_Fatigue
PX090602350000 End of test - Fatigue (Borg Scale) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_End_Heart_Rate
PX090602330000 End of test - Heart rate N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_End_Oxygen_Saturation
PX090602360000 End of test - SpO2 N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_End_Time
PX090602320000 End of test - Time N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Gender
PX090602180000 Gender N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Height_Feet
PX090602210100 Height (in feet) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Height_Inches
PX090602210200 Height (in inches) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Height_Meters
PX090602220100 Height (in meters) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_ID
PX090602140000 Patient ID # N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Medications_Dose
PX090602250100 Medications taken before the test (dose) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Medications_Time
PX090602250200 Medications taken before the test (time) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Number
PX090602130000 Patient name N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Race
PX090602200000 Race N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Supplemental_Oxygen
PX090602260000 Supplemental oxygen during the test N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Weight_Kilograms
PX090602230000 Weight (in kilograms) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Patient_Weight_Pounds
PX090602220200 Weight (in pounds) N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Predicted_Distance
PX090602400000 Predicted distance N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Predicted_Distance_Percent
PX090602410000 Percent predicted N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Pulse_Oximetry_Baseline_Heart_Rate
PX090602430100 If pulse oximetry is performed, what is the more
baseline heart rate? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Pulse_Oximetry_Baseline_Oxygen_Saturation
PX090602430200 If pulse oximetry is performed, what is the more
baseline oxygen saturation (SpO2)? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Rapid_Response_Emergency_Testing_Location
PX090602030000 Is a rapid, appropriate response to an more
emergency possible at the current testing location? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Repeat_Testing
PX090602110200 If this is repeat testing, was repeat more
testing performed about the same time of day? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Resting_Heart_Rate_Blood_Pressure
PX090602020100 Is the subject's resting heart rate above more
120bpm, systolic blood pressure above 180 mm Hg, and diastolic blood pressure above 100 mm Hg? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Resting_Heart_Rate_Blood_Pressure_Physician_Referral
PX090602020200 If the subject answered yes, was the subject more
referred to a physician for assessment and a decision about the conduct of the test? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Subject_Clothing_Shoes
PX090602090000 Is the test subject wearing comfortable more
clothing and appropriate shoes for walking? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Subject_Exercise_Vigorously
PX090602110100 Has the test subject exercised vigorously more
within 2 hours of beginning the test? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Subject_Walking_Aid
PX090602100000 Is the test subject using a walking aid more
during the test? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Technician_Comments
PX090602420000 Tech comments N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Technician_CPR_Advanced_Certification
PX090602050200 If yes, does the subject have advanced more
cardiac life support certification? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Technician_CPR_Basic_Life_Support
PX090602050100 Is the technician certified in more
cardiopulmonary resuscitation with a minimum of Basic Life Supprt by an American Health Association-approved CPR course? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Technician_ID
PX090602160000 Tech ID N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Total_Distance
PX090602390000 Total distance walked in 6 minutes (Number more
of laps * 60 meters + final partial lap (in meters)) show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Walking_Course
PX090602080000 Was the walking course 30 meters in length more
with no bends or pedestrian traffic? show less
N/A
PX090602_Exercise_Capacity_Walk_Number
PX090602150000 Walk # N/A
Respiratory
Measure Name

Exercise Capacity/Six-Minute Walk Test

Release Date

November 28, 2017

Definition

The six-minute walk test measures the distance a person can walk in a period of six minutes.

Purpose

The six-minute walk test is an objective measure of functional exercise capacity for daily physical activities. The test is useful in characterizing and stratifying populations with respect to risk of death or hospitalization and is often used to measure the response to medical interventions in patients with moderate to severe heart or lung disease.

Keywords

Respiratory, six-minute walk, exercise capacity, BODE index, American Thoracic Society, gerontology, aging, geriatrics

Measure Protocols
Protocol ID Protocol Name
90602 Exercise Capacity/Six-Minute Walk Test
Publications

There are no publications listed for this protocol.