Cerebral Palsy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Acupuncture as Complementary Therapy for Cerebral Palsy
Verified date | May 2016 |
Source | University of Arizona |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
Study type | Interventional |
Background: Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most frequent cause of childhood disability in the US. Nevertheless, current standard of care for CP in the U.S. is to a large extent ineffective. The Chinese, on the other hand, claim to have an exceptionally high response rate with the administration of an integrated package of care that includes the combination of intense 'conventional' therapies and acupuncture. Despite numerous anecdotal reports, this claim has not yet been tested in a rigorous scientific way. Objective: To determine the effectiveness of acupuncture when used as an adjunct to intense 'conventional' physical, occupational, and hydro- therapies to improve function and quality of life in children with spastic CP. Hypotheses: (1) Adjunctive acupuncture therapy will improve the gross and fine motor function and the health related quality of life of children with spastic CP more than intense 'conventional' therapies alone. (2) The level of persistence of gross and fine motor function and health related quality of life achieved with adjunctive acupuncture administered in combination with intense 'conventional' therapies will be higher than those achieved with intense 'conventional' therapies alone. Design: A parallel, two-arm, prospective, evaluation-blind, pragmatic, non-inferiority, randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT). Setting: This international collaborative study will be conducted at two different localities: (1) At the Beijing Children's Hospital (BCH), where participants' recruitment, intervention therapies, videotape evaluation, and data collection will be done, and (2) At the University of Arizona, where scoring of the videotape evaluations and data analyses will be done, and from where logistic support will be provided to assure the scientific integrity of the study. Population: Approximately 100 children between the ages 1 and 6 years with spastic CP. Intervention: Concurrent administration of acupuncture with intense 'conventional' therapies at the outset of the study vs. sequential administration of both components. Outcomes: 'Gross Motor Function', 'Fine Motor Function', 'Range of Motion', 'Level of Motor Involvement', and 'Health-Related Quality of Life' measured at times 0,4,8,12,24,and 36 weeks. Evaluation: Independent blinded evaluation with respect to the type of the intervention and the stage of the therapeutic schedule done in the U.S. based on videotapes filmed in China. Data management: Web-based data center and intersite-networking infrastructure. Data analyses: Intention to treat analysis supplemented by linear mixed effects models with nested grouping factors. Significance and future directions: If the hypotheses are confirmed the study would lay the groundwork for future research, and impact clinical practice and health care policy as related to CP therapy.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 75 |
Est. completion date | October 2008 |
Est. primary completion date | March 2008 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 12 Months to 72 Months |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Children between the ages of 12 and 72 months. - Children with a diagnosis of spastic cerebral palsy (CP) or mixed type CP where spasticity is the dominant feature. Exclusion Criteria: - Age - Any child with CP who is younger than 12 months or older than 72 months. - Etiology - Any damage to the CNS that either (a) is not static in nature, such as degenerative or progressive central nervous disorders, or (b) occurred after the first year of life, or (c) any child who has a phenotypic pattern suggesting a chromosomal abnormality (e.g., trisomy 13 or 18). - Diagnosis - Children for whom the diagnosis of spastic CP or mixed-type CP with spasticity as the dominant feature cannot be established with absolute certainty, or children with dyskinetic CP. Rationale - To assure subject homogeneity, in cases in which there is disagreement between the physicians with respect to the diagnosis of a child, even if one of the physicians feels certain that a child has spastic CP, the children would be automatically excluded. - Co-morbidities - Medical conditions, whether acute or chronic, for which acupuncture or intense 'conventional' therapies are considered contraindicated. Rationale - assuring participants' safety. - Co-interventions - Any child receiving or scheduled to receive treatment(s) during the study period that may confound the results (e.g., an orthopedic or neurosurgical procedure, Botulinum toxin injections, a Baclofen pump or hyperbaric oxygen treatment). Rationale -To avoid a threat to causal inferences. - Parallel participation in another CP clinical trial. Rationale - To avoid pragmatic and ethical issues that may arise as a result of a conflict of interests and limited resources. |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
China | Beijing Children's Hospital | Beijing | Beijing |
United States | The University of Arizona, Department of Pediatrics | Tucson | Arizona |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Arizona | Beijing Children's Hospital |
United States, China,
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