Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Approximately 1.9 million youth sustain a concussion each year, and up to 30% experience persistent post-concussive symptoms (PPCS) such as headache, dizziness, and difficulty focusing that continue for weeks or months. PPCS results in greater utilization of sub-specialty care and can impact immediate and long-term social development, cognitive function and academic success. Previous recommendations for treating PPCS have focused on cognitive and physical rest, but more recently guidelines have shifted based on new research suggesting the benefit of rehabilitative exercise for PPCS. The rationale behind using exercise to treat youth with concussion is that gradually increasing physical activity facilitates return to full function. Rehabilitative exercise has since become one of the most common approaches to treating youth with PPCS, but access is challenging since most programs require weekly centralized visits with a concussion specialist. To bridge this gap, the investigators developed a telehealth-delivered approach to treat PPCS, utilizing physical activity trackers (Fitbits) and weekly video conferences with trained research staff. They then conducted a series of pilot studies with this approach, finding excellent feasibility, acceptability, and evidence for more rapid declines in concussive symptoms compared to controls. The investigators also found preliminary evidence that mechanisms behind this intervention may stem from both physiologic processes due to increased moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA) and psychologic processes such as reducing fear- avoidance of concussive symptoms. They now propose a fully-powered randomized controlled trial (RCT) to asses the efficacy of the "Mobile Subthreshold Exercise Program" (M-STEP) for treating youth with PPCS.


Clinical Trial Description

The investigators will recruit n=200 youth 11-18 years old with PPCS. Youth will be randomized to 6 weeks of either usual care plus M-STEP (intervention) or usual care plus stretching (control). Youth in M-STEP will be coached through gradual increases in intensity and duration of rehabilitative exercise via weekly video conferencing (Zoom) and will use Fitbits to guide their progress. Youth in the stretching group will act as attention controls. All youth will complete research-grade measures at multiple time points. Youth will be followed for a total of 6 months. Data will be analyzed using mixed effects models to examine differences between experimental groups in the primary outcome, trajectory of concussive symptoms, and the secondary outcome, changes over time in health-related quality of life, on an intention-to-treat basis. Potential mediators of the treatment effect will also be examined, including fear-avoidance of concussive symptoms and MVPA, and explore the impact of factors such as patient sex and parental protective behaviors. The investigators thus assert the following hypotheses: Hypothesis 1: M-STEP youth will have more rapid declines in HBI and improvement in PedsQL compared to control youth Hypothesis 2: M-STEP youth will have greater increases in MVPA over time than control youth, and these increases will predict more rapid improvement in HBI and PedsQL. Hypothesis 3: M-STEP youth will have steeper declines in fear-avoidance compared to control youth, and these declines will predict more rapid improvement in HBI and PedsQL. IMPACT: The proposed study will definitively answer the question of whether a mobile sub-threshold exercise program (M-STEP) improves outcomes for youth with PPCS. It will also provide essential information about both the long-term impact of this intervention and potential mediators as well as biopsychosocial factors that influence treatment response. The study design uses a rigorous protocolized smartphone administered mHealth intervention that will be readily reproducible and generalizable to the majority of youth with PPCS. If successful, this will be one of the few evidenced-based interventions available to treat youth with PPCS. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04688255
Study type Interventional
Source Seattle Children's Hospital
Contact Sara P Chrisman, MD MPH
Phone 206-884-1490
Email sara.chrisman@seattlechildrens.org
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date March 22, 2021
Completion date September 30, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT04111549 - GOALS Cognitive Training Delivered to Aging Veterans in Person or Via Telehealth N/A
Recruiting NCT05097261 - Ketamine in Acute Brain Injury Patients. Phase 4
Completed NCT03504709 - REsting and Stimulus-based Paradigms to Detect Organized NetworkS and Predict Emergence of Consciousness
Recruiting NCT03899532 - Remote Ischemic Conditioning in Traumatic Brain Injury N/A
Completed NCT05057377 - Estimating Highest Capacity Performance During Evaluation of Walking for Individuals With Traumatic Brain Injury
Withdrawn NCT02776488 - Exogenous Sodium Lactate Infusion in Traumatic Brain Injury (ELI-TBI) Phase 2
Completed NCT02426749 - Treatment and Recovery Monitoring of Post TBI Symptoms N/A
Completed NCT01339702 - The EPIC Project: Impact of Implementing the EMS Traumatic Brain Injury Treatment Guidelines
Recruiting NCT05977270 - The Effects of Lifebloom One on Physical Activity After Acquired Brain Injury N/A
Recruiting NCT04666766 - Detecting Traumatic Intracranial Hemorrhage With Microwaves and Biomarkers N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT04559724 - Gait Training Through a Novel Over-ground Wearable Robotic System in People With Pyramidal Hemisyndromes N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT04515420 - The Influence of Noradrenaline on Coagulation and Fibrinolysis in Severe Isolated Brain Injury
Not yet recruiting NCT05569993 - Glutamine and Traumatic Brain Injury Early Phase 1
Recruiting NCT04331392 - Online Memory Intervention for Individuals With Traumatic Brain Injury N/A
Completed NCT03727737 - Efficacy of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Improvement of Memory in Older Adults With TBI N/A
Completed NCT03153397 - Effect of Prebiotic Fiber- Enriched (scFOS) Enteral Feeding on the Microbiome in Neurological Injury Trauma Patients (PreFEED Microbiome Trial) N/A
Completed NCT01336413 - Neuroactive Steroids and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) in OEF/OIF Veterans Phase 2
Completed NCT02004080 - CREACTIVE - Collaborative REsearch on ACute Traumatic Brain Injury in intensiVe Care Medicine in Europe
Completed NCT04957563 - Clinical Utility of Olfactory Rehabilitation: Treatment for Pacients With Neurosensorial Anosmia N/A
Completed NCT05179330 - Visual Feedback in Lower Limb Rehabilitation N/A