Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Trial
Official title:
Innovative Physiotherapy and Coordination of Care for People With Multiple Sclerosis: a Randomised Controlled Trial and a Qualitative Study
This project comprises a two-arm randomized controlled trial (RCT) complemented by qualitative research on innovative group-based intervention for people with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) performed in the primary health care and organized in collaboration with the services provided by a hospital's outpatient clinic. The RCT will be conducted by Nordland Hospital Trust, Bodø (NLSH), in collaboration with UiT The Arctic University of Norway (UiT) and the Norwegian Centre for Integrated Care and Telemedicine, University Hospital North Norway (NST). The overall purpose of the RCT is to demonstrate whether high-intensity individualised group-based core stability training (GroupCoreSIT) performed by physiotherapists (PTs) in the primary health care has effect on balance, walking and activities of daily living (ADL) in people with MS compared to standard care. Changes in quality of life and costs will also be studied to conclude whether the intervention is cost-effective. The qualitative study contains three parts. The first part aims to investigate users' experiences from participating in the new group intervention and in standard care. The researchers will particularly focus on reflections regarding content, feasibility, potential changes in ADL, self-management, and continuity of care. The second part will investigate how the PTs act and interact with the group while conducting the intervention, particularly how individualization is carried out, and the PTs' reflections from participating in the education and performance of the intervention. The third part explores health professionals' reflections regarding coordination of care in people with MS.
This research project first aims to compare the effects of high-intensity individualized
group-based core stability training (GroupCoreSIT) for people with MS with standard care in
the primary health care focusing on balance, walking, ADL, quality of life and
cost-effectiveness. Secondly, the project aims to investigate patients' experiences from
participating in the intervention and in standard care, particularly addressing reflections
regarding content, relevance and feasibility, changes in ADL, continuity of care,
self-management. The third aim is to investigate how the PTs act and interact with the group
while conducting the intervention, particularly how individualization is carried out, and the
PTs' reflections from participating in the education and performance of the intervention.
Finally, changes in patients' pathways and coordination represent another main objective of
this project.
The RCT: hypothesis, study outcomes and measures:
High-intensity individualised group-based core stability training performed at the municipal
PTs' facilities, complemented by home exercises, will improve balance, walking, ADL, quality
of life and cost-effectiveness. This is reflected in the primary and secondary outcomes.
RCT will be conducted in collaboration with the outpatient clinic for people with MS at the
Nordland Hospital Trust, Bodø, together with six municipalities in Nordland County. The
municipalities are included: Bodø, Rana, Meløy, Rødøy, Vågan and Fauske. The out-patient
clinic agreed to recruit the participants by sending a written invitation to people with MS
in the selected municipalities, fulfilling the inclusion criteria. Six PTs with expertise in
neurological physiotherapy agreed to conduct the intervention. These PTs will attend a four
days practical and theoretical training on the intervention, with 1-2 follow up
videoconferences during the study.
A prospective RCT will be conducted, in which 72 persons with MS will participate, undergo a
6-week intervention, and be followed up for 6 months. Participants will be randomly assigned
to two arms in a 1:1 ratio. Participants in the intervention arm A will be offered
individualised group-based core stability training termed GroupCoreSIT at the PTs facilities,
complemented with home exercises. Participants in the control arm B will be offered standard
care. Significant improvements in outcomes are expected for the intervention arm compared to
standard care. Randomisation will be stratified by European Disability Score Scale (EDSS) to
minimize selection bias and preserve homogeneity between arms. Randomisation and data
collation will be performed using Remote Data Entry (WebCRF), an Internet-based solution
developed by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). The researchers aim
to recruit all subjects within 5 months.
After enrolment, the PTs responsible for performing the intervention, will conduct an
individual assessment of the participants in arm A as a basis for individualisation in the
group based intervention.
Each training group will consist of three participants. The training sessions will last for
60 minutes, performed three days per week, for six weeks, between 10 am and 5 pm. A total of
32 exercises with up to 5 levels of difficulty are described and illustrated by photos, will
be available in an "exercise bank". 10-12 repetitions for each exercise with good quality of
movement will be performed. Every session will end with active stretching/active relaxation
and instructions for home exercises. The participants will perform 30-minute of exercises,
optional to divide into smaller intervals, at home two days per week when there are no
organized group training.
Intervention arm A: the participants will perform the training program: GroupCoreSIT in the
facilities of the municipal physiotherapist.
Control arm B: the participants in the control group will receive standard care, i.e.
following their ordinary physiotherapy services and/or routines/activities.
Procedures and tests The trial will be restricted to patients who have volunteered and
provided written informed consent in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and the
Ethics Committee procedures.
At enrolment, a neurologist will do the EDSS screening, medical history, type of MS and
medications. An appropriately trained PT, also blinded to the arm membership, will perform a
standardized assessment for all the participants using relevant tests and provide the
activity monitor. The following baseline information will be collected and then inserted
electronically in the WebCRF system used also to randomize the patients:
1. Medical history, type of MS, EDSS, age, gender, weight, height, medications,
physiotherapy during the previous 6 months.
2. Two primary outcomes measuring balance in sitting, standing and walking.
3. Nine secondary outcomes measuring balance, waling, activities of daily living (ADL),
quality of life and physical activity At 1 week, 3 months and 6 months post intervention
all the participants will undergo the same standardized assessment performed at
baseline.
Exercise, activity and disease monitoring On a weekly basis all the participants will record:
changes in medication, general wellbeing (qualitative self-score), exacerbations, and
physical activities using a diary. The ActiGraph monitor will be used 1 week prior to
intervention, 1 week post intervention and following the 3 and 6 months testing, demonstrated
and delivered to the subjects by the test PT. In addition, participants in arm A will record:
degree of exhaustion following group sessions (Borg scale) and home exercise completion (in
the training diary).
An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed on all randomised subjects and will serve as
the primary analysis for all outcomes in this study. The data analysis will be carried out
using SPSS. Possible differences between the groups at baseline will be calculated by using
independent sample t-test for continuous variables and chi-square for categorical variables.
Primary outcomes, changes in balance and walking between the groups will be calculated by
using independent sample t-test.
A cost-utility analysis will be conducted using healthcare system costs and quality adjusted
life years (QALYs). QALYs will be calculated based on the answers of the Health Questionnaire
(EQ-5D-3L) used to measure changes in patients' quality of life. The incremental
cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) will be computed as differential costs between intervention
arm and standard arm over the study period, and differential QALYs. Healthcare utilisation
(including hospitalisations, emergency department admissions, outpatients visits,
examinations, primary care visits, rehabilitation) and related costs will be collected
through the hospitals' electronic patient journal (DIPS), from the Norwegian Patient Registry
and The Norwegian Health Economics Administration's (HELFO) system. This secondary outcome
will provide relevant knowledge regarding new effective method in organising healthcare
services. This can be used as a basis for decision making regarding large-scale
implementation of rehabilitation.
Patients' experiences:
The patients' experiences with the intervention will be examined through qualitative research
interviews. The interviews will be conducted on a sample of 8-10 participants from the
intervention and the control arm twice; at the end of intervention and 6 months post
intervention. In accordance with qualitative methods, the researchers will select the sample
strategically to promote breadth and variety of data production. Variation in training
groups, EDSS, age, gender and time since diagnosis are considered to be important. The
interviews will take place in participants' homes or another convenient place in their
municipality. The interview topics include: the first assessment/consultation, the group
situation, content of training, intensity/quantity, pros and cons, home-exercises and ADL.
The same number of subjects from the control group will be interviewed regarding their
experiences with standard care, investigating the same topics. In order to provide insight
into the users' experiences beyond the intervention period the scope for the second
interviews is: retrospective reflections regarding wellbeing and coping with ADL in the
period before, during and after the intervention, self-management, and continuity of care,
pros and cons regarding the intervention and standard care. A theme-based interview guide
will be used as well as audio recordings of the interviews. The material will be transcribed
and analyzed using Systematic Text Condensation applying phenomenology of the body, enactive
theory complemented by neurosciences as a theoretical framework.
Physiotherapists' performance of intervention and experiences:
What the PTs emphasize in their individual assessment prior to the first group session will
be investigated through observation and videotaping of the assessment of one patient in each
training group (12 observations). These observations will be complemented by qualitative
research interview with the actual PT (12 interviews) to illuminate the PTs' reflections
regarding the assessment, planning of the group sessions, choices of exercises and goals for
the individual. To investigate how the PTs' tailor the intervention in situ, how they act and
interact with the participants, one session in each group will be observed and videotaped (12
observations). To illuminate the PTs' reflections regarding education in the intervention,
experiences from conducting it, particularly focusing on considerations regarding goal
attainment, individualization in a group setting and home exercises, the PTs will be
interviewed at the end of each training group period (12 interviews). An observation guide, a
hand held video-camera and a theme-based interview guide will be used as well as audio
recordings of the interviews. The material will be transcribed and analysed using Systematic
Text Condensation applying phenomenology of the body, enactive theory complemented by
neurosciences and practice knowledge as a theoretical framework.
Changes in patient's pathway and coordination of care:
In 2007 The Northern Norway Regional Health Authority (Helse Nord RHF) reported 650 persons
with MS, the selected outpatient clinic has 300 persons enrolled, and prevalence and
incidence in Nordland County have recently increased to a high risk area for MS. Courses for
newly diagnosed persons have priority in the specialist care and current offer of complex
rehabilitation, included high intensity physiotherapy is provided by the rehabilitation unit
at UNN, The Rehabilitation Centre, the Kurbad of North Norway, Valnesfjord Rehabilitation
Centre, supplemented by The National Hakadal MS centre. These institutions are currently
characterised by long waiting lists. A system for early admission to neurological
physiotherapy, and particularly to high intensity programs in the primary health care, is not
established within the coordination of care for people with MS. Referral to municipality
physiotherapy is not systematic, waiting lists in the primary health care are long, and
services are often general and not specifically addressing the needs for people with MS.
To explore coordination of care between the outpatient clinics for people with MS and the
municipalities regarding high intensity physiotherapy, qualitative interviews will be
conducted with selected health personnel (MS-nurses, neurologists, PTs, a total of 8-10
subjects) at the hospitals' outpatient clinics and in municipalities (general practitioners,
PTs, a total of 8-10 subjects), before the intervention (for the standard care) and after the
RCT (for the new organizational model). The interviews will focus on structures for
collaboration and content of service.
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