Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05558254 |
Other study ID # |
ROBERT |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 21, 2022 |
Est. completion date |
December 31, 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
April 2024 |
Source |
Spinal Cord Injury Centre of Western Denmark |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating life event with long term consequences both
physically and mentally. SCI is defined as either complete or incomplete according to the
International Standards of the Neurological Classification of SCI. The primary consequence of
a SCI is paralysis/partial paralysis affecting the person's ability to independently
functioning in everyday life e.g. in and out of bed, sit to stand and walking.
To regain the ability to transfer and walk the most important prerequisite is to rebuild as
much strength as possible in the lower extremities. The optimal training paradigm to increase
strength in partial paralysed muscles is unclear.
Rehabilitation robots are upcoming methods to treat sensorimotor deficits after SCI.
The rehabilitation robot ROBERT might contribute to enhance muscle strength for people with
very weak strength following an incomplete SCI.
The overall objective of this Ph.D project is to investigate the feasibility and effect size
of a muscle strength training intervention assisted by ROBERT® for patients with SCI and
severe paresis (muscle strength 1-3 in hip flexion).
Description:
SCI is a devastating life event with long term consequences both physically and mentally.
To regain the ability to transfer oneself and to walk, the most important prerequisite is to
rebuild as much strength as possible in the lower extremities. The optimal training paradigm
to increase strength in partial paralysed muscles is unclear. The question is whether
strength is best improved by applying the principles of progressive resistance training or by
focusing on high repetitions with limited resistance.
Rehabilitation robots are upcoming methods to treat sensorimotor deficits after SCI. The
rationale is that the use of robotics allows adaptable support and the ability to increase
therapy intensity and dose while reducing the physical burden on the therapist.
The rehabilitation robot ROBERT enables the SCI patient to conduct active or guided
repetitions of specific movements in the lower extremities in the early rehabilitation phase.
The hypothesis is that such use will increase muscle strength faster in the recovery process
than when conducting usual physiotherapist training for people with incomplete SCI.
The objective of this PhD project is to:
1. develop and feasibility test the optimal dose, timing and outcome measures and to
examine feasibility, compliance and acceptability of an intervention for lower
extremities for people with subacute SCI with the rehabilitation robot ROBERT?
2. conduct a pilot with-in participant randomized controlled trail to estimate the effect
size of an intervention to enhance muscle strength assisted by Robotic technology
(ROBERT®) in subacute rehabilitation after spinal cord injury
3. validate accelerometer-based method to identify the supine hip flexion/extension
movement and be able to differentiate it from other activity movement based on the
perviosely developed algorithm.
Hypothesis:
- The patients with subacute SCI and muscle strength 1-3 in manuel muscle testing of hip
flexion bilateral will be able to conduct the training with Robert.
- There is a significant increase in muscle strength (hip flexion) in the leg practicing
with ROBERT® for 8 weeks compared to the other leg receiving usual training. By using
ROBERT® patients with very weak muscle strength are allowed to practise repetitions with
the elimination of gravity and adopted resistance and guidance in the range of movement,
where they don't have the strength to perform the entire range of movement.
The knowledge gained in this study will inform the design of a future RCT study and enable a
power calculation.
- The refinement of the algorithm to monitor activity will be able to differentiate hip
flexion from other activities in patients with SCI
Studies:
1. Feasibility study This study will be conducted prior to the pilot with-in RCT.
Consecutively, 4-8 patients admitted to Spinal Cord Injury Centre of Western Denmark
(SCICWD) from November 2021 - June 2022 will be recruited. Patients with SCI (< 3
month), age ≥ 18 year and muscle strength 1 - 3 in one of the lower leg muscle groups
measured by manual muscle testing will be included. Exclusion criteria: previous
cerebral injury or SCI, previous damage to peripheral nervous system in lower
extremities, instable fractures in thorax or lower extremities, muscle strength 0, 4 or
5, weight > 150 kg.
The patients will conduct 4 weeks training with Robert of one leg 3 times a week.
Muscle strength will be assessed with Handheld dynamometer (HHD) MicroFET2, (Hoggan
Scientific) at baseline and after 4 week. Furthermore descriptive data of recruitment
capability, resulting sample characteristics, procedures of the intervention, time
consumption intervention will be evaluated. Interviews will be performed to get the
patient perspective of the intervention and the acceptability.
The study has been approved by The Danish Scientific Ethics Commission (ref. no.
1-10-72-276-21).
2. Pilot with-in participant RCT It will take place at Spinal Cord Injury Centre of Western
Denmark (SCICWD) from September 2022 - December 2024. 12 consecutively patients admitted
to SCICWD will be recruited. To be eligible to participate participants shall have
incomplete SCI (<12 months), be age ≥ 18 year and have weakened muscle strength grade 1
- 3 in hip flexion bilateral measured by manual muscle testing due to SCI. Exclusion
criteria were: Previous cerebral injury or SCI, previous damage to peripheral nervous
system in lower extremities, instable fractures in thorax or lower extremities, muscle
strength 0, 4 or 5 in hip flexion, weight > 150 kg.
The patient's legs will be randomised to either training with ROBERT® or usual training
(control). The Control group/leg will recieve usual practice consisting of 3-5 times
physiotherapy a week for 8 weeks. A session last 45 minutes. The sessions are
individually adapted and can contain exercise therapy, functional training, assistive
devices, electrical stimulation, hydrotherapy and tread mill training.
Intervention group will receive usual practice. As add-on, the intervention leg will
receive 3-4 sets of 15-20 repetitions (30 seconds rest between each set) of muscle
strength training for hip flexion with ROBERT® three times a week. The ROBERT is
attached to the patient's lower leg and thereby eliminating the gravity of the leg. The
physiotherapist guides the patient's leg in hip flexion and ROBERT record the movement.
ROBERT is set in active or guided mode and will be individually adjusted. When practice
starts the patient get visual feedback to the range of movement of the hip flexion plus
the amount of repetitions conducted and persisting.
From the patients' medical records the following will be collected: Age, sex, injury
onset, aetiology, neurological level of injury (NLI) and American Spinal Injury
Association Impairment Scale (AIS) grade, and Walking Index for SCI (WISCI). At baseline
and after completing the 8 weeks intervention (2-5 days after) muscle strength will be
assessed with Handheld dynamometer (HHD) (19) MicroFET2, (Hoggan Scientific) as well as
electrical activity in hip flexion muscles assessed by surface Electromyography (sEMG)
Keypoint, (Alpine Biomed) (20, 21) and spasticity assessed by Modified Ashworth scale
(22, 23). The thickness of the rectus femoris muscle and the quadriceps femoris muscle
will be assessed by ultrasound Acuson S2000 (Siemens). Number of hip flexions and
activity level will be monitored with accelerometer in both legs all day for three days
at baseline, at week 4 of the intervention and the week after completing the
intervention.
Parametric analyses of paired data (post-pre). Discrete variables will be examined with
non-parametric analysis. Preliminary data from the feasibility study estimate that it
will be realistic to enroll 8-12 persons to complete the study in the period from August
2022 till December 2023.
The study has been approved by The Danish Scientific Ethics Commission (ref. no.
1-10-72-108-22). The study will be conducted in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration
of 2008, the General Data Protection Regulation and legislation and the Data Protection
Act. The study is registered at the internal list of research projects at the Central
Denmark Region (Ref.nr.1-16-02-276-22).
3. Validation study This study will be conducted from May 2022-December 2022. 10 healthy
adults and 10 patients with SCI admitted SCICWD will be recruited. Accelerometer will be
placed with non-allergenic tape at the front and the lateral side of the test person's
legs. The test persons will perform supine hip flexion/extension with and without
ROBERT® as well as sit-to stand, standing, walking, cycling (Motomed) and transfer from
wheelchair to bench. These movements will be recorded with accelerometer as well as
video. Validation of the algorithm will be established using video recordings as gold
standard.