Telerehabilitation Clinical Trial
— TeleSarcoOfficial title:
Feasibility & Effect of a Tele-rehabilitation Program in Pulmonary Sarcoidosis
Pulmonary sarcoidosis (PS) is defined as a multisystem granulomatous disorder of unknown
cause affecting different vital organs, especially the lungs.
PS manifest in reduction of pulmonary function. Overall symptoms lead to poor physical
conditioning contributing to a vicious cycle of more physical inactivity.
Treatment of sarcoidosis is usually limited to patient symptoms. Progressive fibrosis
sometimes can lead to respiratory failure and ultimately, pulmonary transplantation.
Physical training shows promising evidence of a positive effect on PF. No defined training
program with regard to exercise frequency, duration or intensities exists.
PS is a relatively rare disease and patients are scattered in great geographically areas,.It
is difficult to organize targeted group training with supervised physical training,
convenient for patients and affordable for the public health sector. Tele-rehabilitation (TR)
seems to be a good approach to reach patients in low inhabited areas, going from health care
to self-care, empowering patient's awareness of their disease and increasing the flexibility
patients need to acquire healthier behaviors.
Preliminary evaluations from TR initiatives in Scotland showed tele-rehabilitation to be more
cost effective with patients living in remote areas than with the outreach- or centralized
model.
No studies on the feasibility effect of TR in PS exists. The study is a prospective
randomized controlled trial investigating the effects of tele-rehabilitation in patients with
PS compared to standard practice. 24 patients with PS will be randomized in two groups,
trained by tele-rehabilitation for 12 weeks and afterwards followed for 6 months. The control
group will follow the usual control program for PS patients that only involves outpatient
visits approximately every 3rd month. No specific PS rehabilitation program exists. The
intervention group will receive TR in the form of video consultations- and chat sessions with
a real physiotherapist and workout sessions with a virtual physiotherapist agent. They will
also train with virtual reality glasses or tablets that show the actual exercises in the
training program.
Patients will be tested with pulmonary function, physical, anxiety and quality of life
parameters, all at baseline, after 12 weeks of intervention, 3 and 6 months after cessation
of the program.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 26 |
Est. completion date | October 1, 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | October 1, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Diagnosis of PS - Signed informed consent - Adults = 18 years - DLCO = 30% predicted and FVC = 50% predicted - 6 minute walking test distance = 150 m Exclusion Criteria: - Participation in an official rehabilitation program < 3 months before start of the study Musculoskeletal disorders - Severe cardiac diseases (ejection fraction < 30%, daily angina, or otherwise specified by treating cardiologist) - Unable to understand informed consent - Other conditions that hamper the use of tele-rehabilitation - Non-Danish speaking. - Unwillingness to implement the protocol |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Denmark | Pulmonary Disease Research Center | Århus | Aarhus |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Aarhus University Hospital | Eurostars, University of Aarhus |
Denmark,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | 6MWT -12 weeks | Change in the distance walked at a 6MWT measured at week 12. | 12 weeks afte baseline | |
Secondary | 6MWT 6 and 9 month | Change in the distance walked at a 6MWT 6 and 9 months after baseline. | 6 and 9 months after baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in muscle strength measured with the MVC | Change in muscle strength measured with the MVC of the dominant arm | 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in total score in health-related quality of life measured by Sct. Georges Respiratory Questionnaire (Jones, Quirk, and Baveystock 1991) (SGRQ) | SGRQ is a disease specific, self-administered questionnaire with 50 items comprising two domains with 3 components as symptoms, activity and impacts. Each is scored from 0-100, with higher scores corresponding to worse health related quality of life. | 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in fatigue measured by 10-item Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS) | Change in fatigue measured by FAS at 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline. The 10-item Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)(Vries et al. 2004) (Michielsen et al. 2006) is a 10-item general fatigue questionnaire to assess fatigue. Five questions reflect physical fatigue and 5 questions (questions 3 and 6-9) mental fatigue. An answer to every question has to be given, even if the person does not have any complaints at the moment. Scores on question 4 and 10 should be recoded (1=5, 2=4, 3=3, 4=2, 5=1). Subsequently, the total FAS score can be calculated by summing the scores on all questions (recoded scores for questions 4 and 10). The total score ranges from 10 to 50. A total FAS score < 22 indicates no fatigue, a score = 22 indicates fatigue. All online versions of the FAS calculate the FAS scores automatically: a total score as well as mental and physical score will be provided. | 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in total score in health-related quality of life measured by The King's Brief Interstitial Lung disease health status questionnaire (KBILD) | Change in total score in health-related quality of life measured by KBILD at 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline The King's Brief Interstitial Lung disease health status questionnaire (Taylor et al. 2015) is a disease specific, validated, self-completed health status questionnaire that is comprised of 15 items. It has three domains: psychological, breathlessness, activities and chest symptoms. The KBILD domain and total score ranges are 0-100; 100 = best. |
12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in total score of anxiety measured by The General Anxiety Disorder Score (GAD-7 ) | Change in total score of anxiety measured by GAD-7 at 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline The General Anxiety Disorder Score (Jones, Quirk, and Baveystock 1991; Löwe et al. 2008) measures the presence and severity of general anxiety disorder. It is a 7 self-rated items, each item scores 0-3 (not at all, several days, more than half the days, nearly every day); total score range 0-21. | 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in component scores (symptoms, activity & impact) in health-related quality of life measured by SGRQ | Change in component scores (symptoms, activity & impact) in health-related quality of life measured by SGRQ at 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline. The King's Brief Interstitial Lung disease health status questionnaire (Taylor et al. 2015) is a disease specific, validated, self-completed health status questionnaire that is comprised of 15 items. It has three domains: psychological, breathlessness, activities and chest symptoms. The KBILD domain and total score ranges are 0-100; 100 = best. |
12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Change in the number of steps walked measured by a pedometer. | Change in the number of steps walked measured by a pedometer. | 12 weeks, 6 and 9 months after baseline | |
Secondary | Cost of the tele-rehabilitation program | Cost of the tele-rehabilitation program | 12 weeks after baseline |
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