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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT04120207
Other study ID # #2017_03_17_EHS
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date January 1, 2019
Est. completion date August 28, 2019

Study information

Verified date October 2019
Source University of Limerick
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

This study will investigate the effects of eight-weeks home-based Pilates on symptoms of anxiety, depression, and fatigue among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Half of participants will perform two weekly home-based Pilates sessions guided by a DVD, while the other half will maintain their regular daily activities.


Description:

This will be a home-based, single blind, randomised, controlled trial comparing immediate-start home-based Pilates with a delayed-start control group. The study protocol was approved by the University Research Ethics Committee. Participants will provide written informed consent prior to testing. The home-based setting promotes national recruitment of participants through the MS Society of Ireland, via distribution of posters and participation information leaflets on social media and text alerts to members. Interested participants will be invited to contact the lead researcher via phone or email, who will answer any study-related questions. Potential participants will be screened for selection criteria over the phone and provided with Participant Information Sheet (PIS), informed consent, Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR-Q), and Patient Determined Disease Steps (PDDS) form via post or email. Following screening and initial baseline testing, eligible participants will be randomized to immediate-start home-based Pilates, or delayed-start control, by an independent researcher who will not be involved in outcome assessments, using a computer-generated randomisation tool (www.randomizer.org). The Home-based Pilates group will perform two weekly sessions for eight weeks, completed with at least 48-hours between sessions, in their own home, supported by a DVD developed and previously implemented and evaluated by the lead researcher in a feasibility trial among people with Multiple Sclerosis. The instructor on the DVD is a certified Pilates Instructor. Each participant will receive documented details of the Pilates protocol, along with the DVD which will operate on a DVD player or participant's laptop computer. On activating the DVD, participants will be provided with an opening screen, offering four options to choose from; "Play all" plays the entire contents of the DVD from start to finish; "Warm Up", provides introductory teaching points on the core principles of Pilates along with teaching and demonstration of the Pilates' warm-up exercises; "Main Phase" provides demonstrations and key teaching points of the fourteen Pilates exercise routine, and "Post Stretch" demonstrates and teaches the post-stretch exercises. Each Pilates session will last approximately one hour and is comprised of seven Pilates warm-up exercises and fourteen mat-based beginner's level exercise. Four repetitions of each Pilates movement will be performed during sessions in the first two weeks, with intensity being self-regulated by the participant based on level of physical condition. Repetitions will gradually progress at biweekly intervals, resulting in ten repetitions being performed for the final two weeks of the trial (Weeks 7 and 8). Six post-training stretches will be maintained for a minimum of thirty seconds. Fidelity, adherence, dose and compliance shall be monitored via self-report exercise diaries containing session date, number of repetitions completed per exercise, and session RPE (Rate of perceived exertion), recorded by the participant immediately following session completion. Exercise diaries will be supplemented by a weekly telephone call consisting of direct questions about the frequency, intensity, and duration of the Pilates they have completed and whether they have experienced difficulties with exercise completion, any adverse events or relapses.

The Delayed-Start Control group be instructed to maintain their pre-intervention physical activity levels during the trial and will be contacted by the lead researcher by email or telephone to ensure timely completion of the on-line outcome assessments at biweekly intervals. Following the 8-week intervention, Delayed-Start participants will be provided with the Pilates DVD for their own use, but no data will be collected. For both groups, participants who experience a relapse will be immediately withdrawn from the study, which will be recorded by the lead researcher.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 63
Est. completion date August 28, 2019
Est. primary completion date August 28, 2019
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: Adults with self-reported, physician-diagnosed Multiple Sclerosis PDDS score <3 Free from any other significant physical or psychiatric condition Have no previous Pilates experience

-

Exclusion Criteria: Have any medical contraindications to safe participation in physical activity established by the PAR-Q

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Home-based Pilates
The Home-based Pilates group will complete two Pilates classes at home, twice weekly, for a period of eight weeks.
Other:
Delayed-start Pilates
The Delayed-start group will maintain their regular daily activities, and be provided with a copy of the Pilates DVD following the intervention, for their own use.

Locations

Country Name City State
Ireland University of Limerick Limerick

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
University of Limerick

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Ireland, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Profile of Mood States - Brief Form (POMS-B) The 30-item POMS-B assesses the intensity of feelings of tension, depressed mood, energy and fatigue. Participants respond to each item "based on how you feel RIGHT NOW" using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (Extremely). Each subscale score ranges from 0-20. The psychometric properties of the POMS-B are well established. Baseline
Primary Profile of Mood States - Brief Form (POMS-B) The 30-item POMS-B assesses the intensity of feelings of tension, depressed mood, energy and fatigue. Participants respond to each item "based on how you feel RIGHT NOW" using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (Extremely). Each subscale score ranges from 0-20. The psychometric properties of the POMS-B are well established. Week 2
Primary Profile of Mood States - Brief Form (POMS-B) The 30-item POMS-B assesses the intensity of feelings of tension, depressed mood, energy and fatigue. Participants respond to each item "based on how you feel RIGHT NOW" using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (Extremely). Each subscale score ranges from 0-20. The psychometric properties of the POMS-B are well established. Week 4
Primary Profile of Mood States - Brief Form (POMS-B) The 30-item POMS-B assesses the intensity of feelings of tension, depressed mood, energy and fatigue. Participants respond to each item "based on how you feel RIGHT NOW" using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (Extremely). Each subscale score ranges from 0-20. The psychometric properties of the POMS-B are well established. Week 6
Primary Profile of Mood States - Brief Form (POMS-B) The 30-item POMS-B assesses the intensity of feelings of tension, depressed mood, energy and fatigue. Participants respond to each item "based on how you feel RIGHT NOW" using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 4 (Extremely). Each subscale score ranges from 0-20. The psychometric properties of the POMS-B are well established. Week 8
Primary State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) The 20-item State and Trait subscales of the widely used and well-validated STAI will assess anxiety. Participants rate each item using a 4-point Likert scale, from 1 "Not at all" to 4 "Very much so". Total score ranges from 20-80; higher scores indicate greater anxiety. The STAI has well-documented psychometric properties in people with MS. Baseline
Primary State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) The 20-item State and Trait subscales of the widely used and well-validated STAI will assess anxiety. Participants rate each item using a 4-point Likert scale, from 1 "Not at all" to 4 "Very much so". Total score ranges from 20-80; higher scores indicate greater anxiety. The STAI has well-documented psychometric properties in people with MS. Week 2
Primary State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) The 20-item State and Trait subscales of the widely used and well-validated STAI will assess anxiety. Participants rate each item using a 4-point Likert scale, from 1 "Not at all" to 4 "Very much so". Total score ranges from 20-80; higher scores indicate greater anxiety. The STAI has well-documented psychometric properties in people with MS. Week 4
Primary State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) The 20-item State and Trait subscales of the widely used and well-validated STAI will assess anxiety. Participants rate each item using a 4-point Likert scale, from 1 "Not at all" to 4 "Very much so". Total score ranges from 20-80; higher scores indicate greater anxiety. The STAI has well-documented psychometric properties in people with MS. Week 6
Primary State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-Y1) The 20-item State and Trait subscales of the widely used and well-validated STAI will assess anxiety. Participants rate each item using a 4-point Likert scale, from 1 "Not at all" to 4 "Very much so". Total score ranges from 20-80; higher scores indicate greater anxiety. The STAI has well-documented psychometric properties in people with MS. Week 8
Primary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) The 7-item anxiety and depression subscales of the 14-item HADS measures anxiety and depressive symptoms in the prior week. Subscale scores range from 0-21 with higher scores indicative of greater anxiety and depressive symptoms, and validated cut-scores =8 classify anxiety and depression caseness. The HADS has demonstrated reasonable psychometric properties among people with Multiple Sclerosis, demonstrating acceptable sensitivity (90% and 89% for the depression subscale) and specificity (87% and 81% for the anxiety subscale). Baseline
Primary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) The 7-item anxiety and depression subscales of the 14-item HADS measures anxiety and depressive symptoms in the prior week. Subscale scores range from 0-21 with higher scores indicative of greater anxiety and depressive symptoms, and validated cut-scores =8 classify anxiety and depression caseness. The HADS has demonstrated reasonable psychometric properties among people with Multiple Sclerosis, demonstrating acceptable sensitivity (90% and 89% for the depression subscale) and specificity (87% and 81% for the anxiety subscale). Week 2
Primary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) The 7-item anxiety and depression subscales of the 14-item HADS measures anxiety and depressive symptoms in the prior week. Subscale scores range from 0-21 with higher scores indicative of greater anxiety and depressive symptoms, and validated cut-scores =8 classify anxiety and depression caseness. The HADS has demonstrated reasonable psychometric properties among people with Multiple Sclerosis, demonstrating acceptable sensitivity (90% and 89% for the depression subscale) and specificity (87% and 81% for the anxiety subscale). Week 4
Primary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) The 7-item anxiety and depression subscales of the 14-item HADS measures anxiety and depressive symptoms in the prior week. Subscale scores range from 0-21 with higher scores indicative of greater anxiety and depressive symptoms, and validated cut-scores =8 classify anxiety and depression caseness. The HADS has demonstrated reasonable psychometric properties among people with Multiple Sclerosis, demonstrating acceptable sensitivity (90% and 89% for the depression subscale) and specificity (87% and 81% for the anxiety subscale). Week 6
Primary Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) The 7-item anxiety and depression subscales of the 14-item HADS measures anxiety and depressive symptoms in the prior week. Subscale scores range from 0-21 with higher scores indicative of greater anxiety and depressive symptoms, and validated cut-scores =8 classify anxiety and depression caseness. The HADS has demonstrated reasonable psychometric properties among people with Multiple Sclerosis, demonstrating acceptable sensitivity (90% and 89% for the depression subscale) and specificity (87% and 81% for the anxiety subscale). Week 8
Primary Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) The 16-item QIDS will assess depressive symptom severity across nine core criteria for depression, based on the prior week. Participants will rate severity and frequency of specific symptoms experienced in the prior week. Total scores range from 0-27, with a higher score illustrating more symptom severity. Scores >5 indicate at least mild depression. The QIDS is a valid measure to quantify depressive symptoms with good sensitivity and specificity among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Baseline
Primary Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) The 16-item QIDS will assess depressive symptom severity across nine core criteria for depression, based on the prior week. Participants will rate severity and frequency of specific symptoms experienced in the prior week. Total scores range from 0-27, with a higher score illustrating more symptom severity. Scores >5 indicate at least mild depression. The QIDS is a valid measure to quantify depressive symptoms with good sensitivity and specificity among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Week 2
Primary Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) The 16-item QIDS will assess depressive symptom severity across nine core criteria for depression, based on the prior week. Participants will rate severity and frequency of specific symptoms experienced in the prior week. Total scores range from 0-27, with a higher score illustrating more symptom severity. Scores >5 indicate at least mild depression. The QIDS is a valid measure to quantify depressive symptoms with good sensitivity and specificity among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Week 4
Primary Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) The 16-item QIDS will assess depressive symptom severity across nine core criteria for depression, based on the prior week. Participants will rate severity and frequency of specific symptoms experienced in the prior week. Total scores range from 0-27, with a higher score illustrating more symptom severity. Scores >5 indicate at least mild depression. The QIDS is a valid measure to quantify depressive symptoms with good sensitivity and specificity among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Week 6
Primary Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS) The 16-item QIDS will assess depressive symptom severity across nine core criteria for depression, based on the prior week. Participants will rate severity and frequency of specific symptoms experienced in the prior week. Total scores range from 0-27, with a higher score illustrating more symptom severity. Scores >5 indicate at least mild depression. The QIDS is a valid measure to quantify depressive symptoms with good sensitivity and specificity among people with Multiple Sclerosis. Week 8
Primary Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) The 21-item MFIS is a recommended core outcome measure in exercise studies in people with Multiple Sclerosis, that measures physical, cognitive and psychosocial components of fatigue. Participants respond to "how often fatigue has affected you in this way during the past 4 weeks", using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Never) to 4 (Almost Always). Physical subscale scores range from 0 to 36, Cognitive from 0 to 40, and Psychosocial from 0 to 8. Total MFIS scores (0 to 84), is computed by summing physical, cognitive, and psychosocial subscale scores, with a higher score indicating greater impact of fatigue on participant activities. A total fatigue cut-off score of =38 distinguishes between fatigued and non-fatigued individual. It has been proposed by the Multiple Sclerosis Council for Clinical Practice Guidelines as a reliable assessment tool of perceived fatigue (1998), with excellent test-retest reliability, and good correlation with the Fatigue Severity Scale. Baseline
Primary Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) The 21-item MFIS is a recommended core outcome measure in exercise studies in people with Multiple Sclerosis, that measures physical, cognitive and psychosocial components of fatigue. Participants respond to "how often fatigue has affected you in this way during the past 4 weeks", using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Never) to 4 (Almost Always). Physical subscale scores range from 0 to 36, Cognitive from 0 to 40, and Psychosocial from 0 to 8. Total MFIS scores (0 to 84), is computed by summing physical, cognitive, and psychosocial subscale scores, with a higher score indicating greater impact of fatigue on participant activities. A total fatigue cut-off score of =38 distinguishes between fatigued and non-fatigued individual. It has been proposed by the Multiple Sclerosis Council for Clinical Practice Guidelines as a reliable assessment tool of perceived fatigue (1998), with excellent test-retest reliability, and good correlation with the Fatigue Severity Scale. Week 2
Primary Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) The 21-item MFIS is a recommended core outcome measure in exercise studies in people with Multiple Sclerosis, that measures physical, cognitive and psychosocial components of fatigue. Participants respond to "how often fatigue has affected you in this way during the past 4 weeks", using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Never) to 4 (Almost Always). Physical subscale scores range from 0 to 36, Cognitive from 0 to 40, and Psychosocial from 0 to 8. Total MFIS scores (0 to 84), is computed by summing physical, cognitive, and psychosocial subscale scores, with a higher score indicating greater impact of fatigue on participant activities. A total fatigue cut-off score of =38 distinguishes between fatigued and non-fatigued individual. It has been proposed by the Multiple Sclerosis Council for Clinical Practice Guidelines as a reliable assessment tool of perceived fatigue (1998), with excellent test-retest reliability, and good correlation with the Fatigue Severity Scale. Week 4
Primary Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) The 21-item MFIS is a recommended core outcome measure in exercise studies in people with Multiple Sclerosis, that measures physical, cognitive and psychosocial components of fatigue. Participants respond to "how often fatigue has affected you in this way during the past 4 weeks", using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Never) to 4 (Almost Always). Physical subscale scores range from 0 to 36, Cognitive from 0 to 40, and Psychosocial from 0 to 8. Total MFIS scores (0 to 84), is computed by summing physical, cognitive, and psychosocial subscale scores, with a higher score indicating greater impact of fatigue on participant activities. A total fatigue cut-off score of =38 distinguishes between fatigued and non-fatigued individual. It has been proposed by the Multiple Sclerosis Council for Clinical Practice Guidelines as a reliable assessment tool of perceived fatigue (1998), with excellent test-retest reliability, and good correlation with the Fatigue Severity Scale. Week 6
Primary Modified Fatigue Impact Scale (MFIS) The 21-item MFIS is a recommended core outcome measure in exercise studies in people with Multiple Sclerosis, that measures physical, cognitive and psychosocial components of fatigue. Participants respond to "how often fatigue has affected you in this way during the past 4 weeks", using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Never) to 4 (Almost Always). Physical subscale scores range from 0 to 36, Cognitive from 0 to 40, and Psychosocial from 0 to 8. Total MFIS scores (0 to 84), is computed by summing physical, cognitive, and psychosocial subscale scores, with a higher score indicating greater impact of fatigue on participant activities. A total fatigue cut-off score of =38 distinguishes between fatigued and non-fatigued individual. It has been proposed by the Multiple Sclerosis Council for Clinical Practice Guidelines as a reliable assessment tool of perceived fatigue (1998), with excellent test-retest reliability, and good correlation with the Fatigue Severity Scale. Week 8
Secondary Seven-day Physical Activity Recall Scale (7d-PAR) This measures the approximate number of hours the subject slept and how much time they engaged in moderate, hard, and very hard activity. It is a valid measure used extensively in MS research, and has demonstrated high test-retest reliability. Baseline
Secondary Seven-day Physical Activity Recall Scale (7d-PAR) This measures the approximate number of hours the subject slept and how much time they engaged in moderate, hard, and very hard activity. It is a valid measure used extensively in MS research, and has demonstrated high test-retest reliability. Week 2
Secondary Seven-day Physical Activity Recall Scale (7d-PAR) This measures the approximate number of hours the subject slept and how much time they engaged in moderate, hard, and very hard activity. It is a valid measure used extensively in MS research, and has demonstrated high test-retest reliability. Week 4
Secondary Seven-day Physical Activity Recall Scale (7d-PAR) This measures the approximate number of hours the subject slept and how much time they engaged in moderate, hard, and very hard activity. It is a valid measure used extensively in MS research, and has demonstrated high test-retest reliability. Week 6
Secondary Seven-day Physical Activity Recall Scale (7d-PAR) This measures the approximate number of hours the subject slept and how much time they engaged in moderate, hard, and very hard activity. It is a valid measure used extensively in MS research, and has demonstrated high test-retest reliability. Week 8
Secondary Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) This is a self-report measure of physical activity in persons with multiple sclerosis. Its validity is well established in MS, and it is sensitive to change following active interventions. Frequency of strenuous (e.g., running or jogging), moderate (e.g., fast walking, easy swimming), and mild (e.g., easy walking) exercise performed for more than 15 minutes during leisure time over a usual week was recorded. Total weekly leisure activity scores were calculated as follows, (strenuous x 9) + (moderate x 5) + (mild x 3). Scores (>=24) indicate activity levels to provide substantial benefits towards overall health contribution. Baseline
Secondary Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) This is a self-report measure of physical activity in persons with multiple sclerosis. Its validity is well established in MS, and it is sensitive to change following active interventions. Frequency of strenuous (e.g., running or jogging), moderate (e.g., fast walking, easy swimming), and mild (e.g., easy walking) exercise performed for more than 15 minutes during leisure time over a usual week was recorded. Total weekly leisure activity scores were calculated as follows, (strenuous x 9) + (moderate x 5) + (mild x 3). Scores (>=24) indicate activity levels to provide substantial benefits towards overall health contribution. Week 2
Secondary Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) This is a self-report measure of physical activity in persons with multiple sclerosis. Its validity is well established in MS, and it is sensitive to change following active interventions. Frequency of strenuous (e.g., running or jogging), moderate (e.g., fast walking, easy swimming), and mild (e.g., easy walking) exercise performed for more than 15 minutes during leisure time over a usual week was recorded. Total weekly leisure activity scores were calculated as follows, (strenuous x 9) + (moderate x 5) + (mild x 3). Scores (>=24) indicate activity levels to provide substantial benefits towards overall health contribution. Week 4
Secondary Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) This is a self-report measure of physical activity in persons with multiple sclerosis. Its validity is well established in MS, and it is sensitive to change following active interventions. Frequency of strenuous (e.g., running or jogging), moderate (e.g., fast walking, easy swimming), and mild (e.g., easy walking) exercise performed for more than 15 minutes during leisure time over a usual week was recorded. Total weekly leisure activity scores were calculated as follows, (strenuous x 9) + (moderate x 5) + (mild x 3). Scores (>=24) indicate activity levels to provide substantial benefits towards overall health contribution. Week 6
Secondary Godin Leisure-Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) This is a self-report measure of physical activity in persons with multiple sclerosis. Its validity is well established in MS, and it is sensitive to change following active interventions. Frequency of strenuous (e.g., running or jogging), moderate (e.g., fast walking, easy swimming), and mild (e.g., easy walking) exercise performed for more than 15 minutes during leisure time over a usual week was recorded. Total weekly leisure activity scores were calculated as follows, (strenuous x 9) + (moderate x 5) + (mild x 3). Scores (>=24) indicate activity levels to provide substantial benefits towards overall health contribution. Week 8
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