Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05208463 |
Other study ID # |
JA ages study |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
January 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
September 30, 2021 |
Study information
Verified date |
January 2024 |
Source |
Joint Academy |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Observational
|
Clinical Trial Summary
We aim to study if there are differences in outcomes between different age groups for persons
with knee or hip osteoarthritis during treatment in digitally delivered exercise and
education treatment.
Description:
Study questions:
Primary:
Do the mean outcomes for these 3 age groups differ (as they are, unadjusted, and using JA 'as
prescribed' for first-line treatment of knee and hip OA by the Swedish National Board of
Health and Welfare (Socialstyrelsen)? To what extent does adherence and other covariates
explain the potential differences in outcomes?
Secondary:
Does the adherence to JA treatment differ across age groups? Does the JA uptake differ by age
when comparing age distribution of JA participants with age distribution of OA in the Skåne
Region population?
Background Osteoarthritis (OA) is among the leading causes of disability worldwide. Due to
its rising prevalence, the identification of appropriate care and care delivery modalities is
a priority for the health care systems. Exercise and education constitute the first-line
intervention for people with knee and hip OA and are effective regardless of symptoms and
disease severity. This first-line intervention is available as face-to-face programs, or
digital programs via eHealth apps. No published studies have yet examined if, among the OA
population, the uptake, or the outcomes of the program, differ between younger or older
participants in a digital first-line OA intervention. Our understanding of how background
(demographic) factors interact with uptake and outcomes is incomplete.
Methods This is an observational, retrospective, register-based study of participants in a
digital osteoarthritis self-management program.
All participants signed informed consent digitally upon registration. The regional ethics
committee of Lund University and the Swedish Ethical Review Authority provided ethical
approval (Dnr: 2018/650, 2019-02232 and 2020-05431). The study adheres to the STROBE
guidelines for observational studies.
Setting and participants Participants joined the digital OA self-management and education
program (see Intervention below for details), through recommendation by their local
orthopaedic surgeon or physiotherapist, and via online advertisements and campaigns placed on
search engines and social networks. Included participants had a radiographic and or clinical
diagnosis of hip or knee OA from a physical therapist or physician (95% of all patients at
the date of data extraction). Individuals without a prior diagnosis had clinical OA confirmed
by an orthopaedic surgeon or physiotherapist via telephone (diagnosis according to NICE UK
criteria and Swedish National Guidelines, and confirming the absence of any red flag
symptoms), or if deemed necessary were recommended to seek face-to-face care before inclusion
in the program.
All data for the present study were extracted from the digital self-management program data
registry on the 22nd of March 2021. Criteria for inclusion in the primary data extraction
were:
- Having registered in the program and had the first telephone contact with the
physiotherapist assigned to the patient, and enrolled between March 1, 2018 and November
30, 2020.
- Having reported hip or knee as most symptomatic (index) joint
- Having provided 3-month follow-up data on or before February 28, 2021
These selection criteria resulted in 14006 eligible participants. Adherence was defined as
the percentage of completed activities (exercises, and text or video lessons on OA, with
quizzes on lesson material) per the pre-defined period of 12 weeks. A cut-off of 80% or
higher adherence corresponds to the National Recommendations for first-line knee and hip OA
treatment by the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare (1).
Intervention The intervention consisted of a digital, structured and individualized
first-line treatment program for people with hip or knee OA (Joint Academy®;
www.jointacademy.com ). The physiotherapist-led program consists of instructions for
neuromuscular exercises appropriately adjusted to each patient in regard to degrees of
complexity and difficulty. Exercises are distributed daily during the whole participation
period, in general two per day, for a total of 163 exercise sessions over 12 weeks. While
rating perceived difficulty and adding comments, patients also indicate when exercises are
completed. Program progression is halted until all exercises for the day are marked as
completed. Information (based on current national OA management guidelines and research) in
the form of text or video lessons (with quizzes on the material after each episode) on
subjects related to OA, OA symptoms and management is also distributed to each participant.
The lessons come packed in themes, with each theme containing 1-5 lessons where participants
receive one theme per week the first six weeks, and then every other week, for a total of 31
lessons over 12 weeks. Completion of a lesson is indicated by the patient answering the quiz
correctly. Additionally, continuous access to, and dialogue with, is provided by a
physiotherapist through an encrypted chat function and telephone.
Main exposure & outcomes Exposure Age (categorized in 3 groups) is the main exposure of
interest.
Outcomes
For research question 1:
1. Joint pain will be assessed at baseline and at week 12 using the Numerical Rating Scale
(NRS, discrete boxes 0-10) with the instruction: "Mark on this scale how much pain you
had the last week in your hip/knee", followed by a 0-10 scale where 0 was defined as No
pain and 10 was defined as Maximum pain.
2. As a measure of physical function, the 30 second chair rise will be measured at baseline
and week 12, performed by the participant with the help of an instruction video with a
coupled visual timer. The patient enters the performed number of repetitions after each
test.
3. Among other outcomes to be reported are changes between baseline and 12 weeks follow-up
in self-reported KOOS-12 and HOOS-12, KOOS-PS, HOOS-PS, response to anchor questions,
response to questions on satisfaction or not with treatment, fear of movement, and
walking difficulties.
All outcomes will be self-assessed and self-entered using the digital program interface and
selected based on the International Consortium for Health Outcomes Measurement Standard Set
for Hip & Knee Osteoarthritis (ICHOM) (2).
For research question 2:
Adherence as measured (between 0 to 100%) and desirable adherence ≥80% (i.e. ≥80% completed
exercises, text or video lessons on OA, with quizzes on lesson material offered in the
digital program) between 0 and 12 weeks of first-line OA treatment delivered digitally.
For research question 3:
Registration in JA is the outcome of interest.
Endpoints Main endpoints
1. Self-reported change in index joint (knee or hip) pain on the NRS-scale between baseline
and 12 weeks of follow-up for the three age groups <=59, 60-69, and >=70
2. Self-reported change between baseline and 12 weeks in 30-second chair rise test for the
three age groups <=59, 60-69, and >=70
Other endpoints Outcomes will be compared for the three age groups >=59, 60-69, and >=70 for
the following KOOS-12 questionnaire HOOS-12 questionnaire KOOS-PS questionnaire HOOS-PS
questionnaire Physical activity Responder criteria and patient responses to questions on
satisfactory health state and treatment failure.
Covariates We will examine to what extent the potential differences across age groups in
research questions 1 & 2 can be explained by the baseline demographic, socioeconomic
(employment status and education level) and clinical (BMI, co-morbidity, overall health
status, index joint) characteristics.
Sample size This being a registry-based study of prospectively collected data, no formal
power calculation will be provided. However, with the number of patients providing data,
statistical power will be more than sufficient to analyze conclusively relevant group
differences for the main endpoints.
Statistical analysis
Data description Summary data by age groups will be described by the mean value, standard
deviation and number of observations or the number and percent of the categories of interest.
For research question 1, we perform ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions of the outcome
of interest on age group and the baseline value of that outcome. Next, we adjust for all
other covariates including adherence. Finally, we will employ the Oaxaca-Blinder (OB)
decomposition technique to understand the reasons for potential differences across age groups
in the outcome of interest. OB decomposition decomposes differences between groups into
"explained" and "unexplained" portions. The explained part estimates the amount of the
differences in the outcome attributable to age group differences in the means of explanatory
variables. The unexplained part originates from the differences in the associations between
the outcome and explanatory variables across age groups. This latter part represents the
magnitude of difference which will remain even if the age groups had identical means of
covariates. In addition to decomposition of mean differences between age groups, we will also
decompose the difference in variance of the outcome using OB technique. In interpreting the
findings, we will take into account the minimal clinically important difference for each
outcome (e.g. differences above 10 (scale 0-100), or 1 (scale 0-10) in pain).
For research question 2, we will use OLS regression (with adherence as measured) and logistic
regression (for desirable adherence: adherence≥80%) to investigate age group differences in
these outcomes. Similar to research question 1, we will use OB technique to decompose the
potential gap between age groups in these two outcomes. In interpreting the findings, we will
take into account the minimal clinically important difference of 2.0 in repetitions"
For research question 3, we will obtain data on doctor-diagnosed knee and/or hip OA among the
Skåne Region population by age group and contrast this with the JA participants resident in
the Skåne. This comparison will reflect what proportion of people with doctor-diagnosed OA in
each age group registered in JA.
In all studies we will conduct subgroup analyses by index joint (knee & hip) if data allows.
Moreover, since the rate of dropout between the baseline and 3 months follow up might be
different across age groups, we will apply inverse probability weighting to account for this.