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Clinical Trial Summary

Activity and exercise are believed to be of benefit for reducing disability in older adults, yet the majority of older adults do not participate in regular exercise and is not active. This is especially true for older adults following hip fracture after they complete the usual rehabilitation program. This study is being done to compare two 16-week supervised multi-part physical therapy programs (interventions) initiated up to 26 weeks after hip fracture. The investigators want to test whether the interventions lead to improvements in a person's ability to walk on their own in the home and in the local community. With this knowledge the investigators hope to help a greater number of hip fracture patients enjoy a more complete recovery and improved overall health. ANCILLARY STUDY #1 - MECHANISTIC PATHWAYS TO COMMUNITY AMBULATION (CAP-MP) The goal of this ancillary study is to investigate several mechanisms thought to be related to recovery in ambulatory ability after hip fracture. Selected mechanistic pathways are being investigated by obtaining mechanistic measurements of the participants randomized in the University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) clinical site of CAP. ANCILLARY STUDY #2 - DIET AND DIETARY PATTERNS IN OLDER ADULTS UNDERGOING HIP FRACTURE REHABILITATION The goal of this ancillary study is to analyze dietary patterns for the nutritional characterization of older adults recovering from a hip fracture. The identified dietary patterns, as well as motivators and barriers to intake, will be assessed for their impact on the rate of return to community ambulation in participants randomized at the University of Connecticut Health Center (UCHC) clinical site of CAP. ANCILLARY STUDY #3 - ROLE OF GLUCOSE METABOLISM IN STRENGTH AND FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER HIP FRACTURE The goal of this ancillary study is to assess the impact of glucose metabolism on strength and functional performance following resistance training in participants randomized at the UCHC clinical site of CAP. ANCILLARY STUDY #4 - MUSCLE MECHANISMS UNDERLYING RECOVERY OF FUNCTION AFTER HIP FRACTURE The goal of this ancillary study is to understand some of the key muscle mechanisms associated with recovery in community ambulation following hip fracture in response to the two interventions for participants randomized at the Arcadia University (AU) clinical site of CAP.


Clinical Trial Description

MAIN STUDY Despite improvements in medical management, significant residual disability remains in older persons after a hip fracture. The goal of current clinical practice is independent, safe household ambulation two to three months after surgery. Hip fracture-acquired dependency in functional activities of daily living persists well beyond three months post-surgery. This residual disability indicates that current standard Medicare-reimbursed post-hip fracture rehabilitation (i.e., usual care) fails to return many patients to pre-fracture levels of function. In contrast to stroke and heart disease, other commonly occurring acute conditions in the older population, there are few intervention trials focused on decreasing disability following hip fracture. None of the trials for hip fracture has examined the effect of early post-fracture intervention on the ability to ambulate at a level required for independent function in the community (i.e., community ambulation). Thus, there is a paucity of evidence to justify extending medical management beyond usual care in persons following hip fracture to achieve community, rather than merely household, ambulation. A randomized controlled trial (RCT) including 210 older adults who have experienced a hip fracture will be carried out at three clinical sites with half of the subjects receiving a specific multi-component intervention (PUSH) and the other half receiving a non-specific multi-component intervention (PULSE). Randomization of 210 participants meeting eligibility criteria will take place after post-acute rehabilitation ends, approximately 6 months (26 weeks) after admission to the hospital for hip fracture. The primary endpoint will be measured using the Six-Minute Walk Test (SMWT) at the end of the 16-week intervention period. The goal is to enable older adults who have experienced a hip fracture to recover sufficiently to become community ambulators. Primary Aim The primary aim of the study is to determine if a specific multi-component 16-week intervention based on aerobic conditioning, specificity of training, and muscle overload (the PUSH intervention), initiated within 26 weeks of admission to the hospital for hip fracture, will be more successful in producing community ambulation at 16 weeks after randomization than a non-specific multi-component intervention of transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), flexibility activities, and active range of motion exercises (AROM) (the PULSE intervention). Secondary Aims 1. To determine whether the proportion of community ambulators differs between the PUSH and PULSE interventions at 40 weeks post-randomization and whether the difference in proportions at 40 weeks changed from the difference in proportions at 16 weeks 2. To compare the PUSH and PULSE interventions at 16 weeks and 40 weeks post-randomization with respect to five secondary outcomes that are thought to be precursors to community ambulation (endurance, dynamic balance, walking speed, quadriceps strength, and lower extremity function) 3. To compare the PUSH and PULSE interventions at 16 weeks and 40 weeks post-randomization with respect to several tertiary outcomes (activities of daily living, quality of life, physical activity, lower extremity physical performance, balance confidence, increase of 50 meters or more in distance walked in six minutes, nutritional status, cognitive status, and depressive symptoms) 4. To compare the economic value of the PUSH and PULSE interventions by estimating the impact of the interventions on cost per quality-adjusted life year (QALY) gained over the follow-up period. In addition to study outcome measures, expected adverse events (AEs) will be assessed every four weeks during a telephone interview. Information about reportable adverse events (RAEs), which include serious adverse events (SAEs), unexpected AEs, or injury that occurs under supervision by study staff, will be collected throughout the study. Vitamin D, calcium, and multivitamin adherence will be monitored by pill counts every four weeks during the intervention period and by self-report during the 4-week telephone calls. Adherence with the PT interventions will also be monitored. For participants randomized prior to version 10.0 of the protocol, follow-up assessment visits occurred 16 weeks and 40 weeks from the date of randomization and telephone interviews were conducted every four weeks during the 40-week study period for a total of 10 telephone interviews. For participants consented under version 10.0 of the protocol, all follow-up will end at 16 weeks post-randomization. In version 11.0 of the protocol, we will eliminate several secondary and tertiary outcome measures. In the description of outcome measures, we identify the measures that will not be collected for participants consented under protocol version 11.0 or later. ANCILLARY STUDIES ANCILLARY STUDY #1 - MECHANISTIC PATHWAYS TO COMMUNITY AMBULATION (CAP-MP) - Dr. Jay Magaziner [Ancillary Study #1 Start Date: April 12, 2014; Primary Completion Date: October 19, 2017; n=39] The CAP-MP ancillary study is intended to supplement the information gained from the parent CAP study, to help investigators understand how older adults recover after injury. Participants enrolled in the CAP parent study at the Baltimore site are invited to participate in the CAP-MP ancillary study and undergo additional testing at the same time points as for the parent CAP study. The objective of the CAP-MP ancillary study is to examine mechanistic factors hypothesized to be on the pathway between two 16-week interventions post-hip fracture and recovery and the ability to ambulate independently in the community. The effect of the interventions on these factors 24 weeks after the intervention ends also will be evaluated. The outcomes for the CAP-MP ancillary study are secondary or tertiary to the main CAP study. Primary Aim. To determine if, at the end of the 16-week intervention, participants in the PUSH group, compared to the PULSE group, have: a) greater muscle volume and attenuation (i.e., reduced intra-muscular fat) of the thigh; b) greater lower extremity strength; c) greater bone mineral density and bone strength; d) more bone formation and less bone resorption; e) lower levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines; f) higher levels of the hormones insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, testosterone, and estradiol; g) greater aerobic capacity; h) greater improvement in gait and balance; and i) better cognition and fewer depressive symptoms. Secondary Aim 1. To determine the long-term (i.e., 24 weeks after intervention ends) effect of the intervention on the mechanistic factors detailed in the primary aim. Secondary Aim 2. To evaluate the relationships between mechanistic factors detailed in the primary aim above and community ambulatory ability at the end of the intervention and 24 weeks later in order to identify those mechanisms that are most responsible for the ability to ambulate in the community following delivery of the intervention. Tertiary Aim. To quantify the mediating effect of mechanistic factors detailed in the primary aim on the relationship between the intervention and ability to ambulate in the community at the end of the intervention (16 weeks post-randomization) and 24 weeks later. ANCILLARY STUDY #2 - DIET AND DIETARY PATTERNS IN OLDER ADULTS UNDERGOING HIP FRACTURE REHABILITATION - Dr. Anne Kenny [n=11] This ancillary study will analyze dietary patterns for the nutritional characterization of older adults recovering from a hip fracture. The identified dietary patterns, as well as motivators and barriers to intake, will be assessed for their impact on the rate of return to community ambulation in the CAP study. Hypothesis: Those who consume dietary patterns similar to a Mediterranean style diet will have less malnutrition with greater likelihood for a return to community ambulation. Aim 1. At baseline determine degree of Mediterranean style diet intake and dietary patterns in our sample of hip fracture patients to correlate with nutritional status assessed by the Mini Nutritional Assessment tool (MNA). Aim 2. Determine motivators and barriers to intake in the hip fracture rehabilitation population and associate with dietary patterns and nutritional status. Aim 3. Diets determined at baseline will be used to predict community ambulation and similar primary endpoints for CAP. ANCILLARY STUDY #3 - ROLE OF GLUCOSE METABOLISM IN STRENGTH AND FUNCTIONAL RECOVERY AFTER HIP FRACTURE - Dr. Anne Kenny [n=21] The goal of this ancillary study is to assess the impact of glucose metabolism on strength and functional performance following resistance training in the population. Data on rehabilitation capacity post-fracture in those with diabetes mellitus (DM) are limited and mixed. Studies focusing on rehabilitation potential in DM demonstrate either no impact or a decrease in functional recovery. Hypothesis: Community-dwelling ambulatory hip fracture survivors with impaired glucose metabolism (measured as homeostasis model assessment-estimated insulin resistance [HOMA- IR] or diagnosis of DM) will not recover lower extremity strength or function as well as those with normal glucose metabolism in response to resistance exercise compared to non-resistance training. Further, investigators propose that higher AGE (measured as pentosidine level and its receptor) will impair strength and functional improvement with resistance exercise. Those with IR and DM have lower IGF-1 and higher levels of IGF binding proteins (IGFBP1 and 3) further limiting the available IGF-1 for tissue use. Investigators hypothesize that the strength and functional improvement from resistance exercise will be mitigated by higher IGFBP in those with DM and IR compared to those with normal glucose metabolism. Aim 1. To compare change in strength and function between those with diabetes mellitus, insulin resistance, or without either condition compared between two multi-component exercise interventions in which one includes resistance. Aim 2. To determine association between baseline AGE and IGF/IGFBP on strength and functional improvement and evaluate contribution of change in biomarkers to muscle/function response from resistance exercise. ANCILLARY STUDY #4 - MUSCLE MECHANISMS UNDERLYING RECOVERY OF FUNCTION AFTER HIP FRACTURE - Dr. Marty Eastlack [Ancillary Study #4 Start Date: April 6, 2015; Primary Completion Date: December 13, 2017; n=22] The purpose of this ancillary study is, therefore, to examine the effect of the two interventions on the precursors to participation in the community. Hypothesis: Those who participate in the PUSH intervention will have less impairment in body structure and function (muscle thickness and echo intensity), fewer limitations in activities (chair rate of rise and fast gait speed) and therefore better likelihood to return to participation (community ambulation). Aim 1: To determine if there is a difference between PUSH and PULSE with respect to change in muscle quality (muscle thickness and echo intensity), muscle power (chair rate of rise) and fast gait speed. Aim 2: To see if differences persist 40 weeks post-randomization. Aim 3: To see if changes in muscle quality predict faster gait speed, chair rate of rise and chair rise strategy (this is categorical) among all participants. Aim 4: To describe the quality of movement (chair rise strategy and capacity, standing symmetry, temporospatial aspects of gait) among all participants. Aim 5: To confirm that rate of rise in standing is a proxy for instrumented measure of lower extremity power. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT01783704
Study type Interventional
Source University of Maryland, Baltimore
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 10, 2013
Completion date October 17, 2017

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