Peripheral Arterial Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Crossover Study With Nested Qualitative Component Investigating the Clinical Efficacy and Acceptability of Unloading Shoes in Patients With Intermittent Claudication Due to Peripheral Arterial Disease
Some people experience a cramp-like leg pain during walking that is relieved only by rest.
This is called intermittent claudication (IC) and it is a common symptom of peripheral
arterial disease. Patients with IC struggle to walk, which in turn lowers their quality of
life.
The intensity of IC pain experienced during walking depends on several factors, including
the type of footwear worn. For example, non-supportive shoes may make the calf muscles work
harder during walking, leading to earlier and more-severe symptoms of IC.
A member of the research team has developed a shoe that reduces the work done by the
lower-leg muscles during walking. Preliminary data indicate that, when wearing these
"unloading shoes", people with IC were able to walk further without pain as compared with
when wearing a normal pair of shoes. The current project aims to provide further information
on the usefulness and acceptability of these shoes.
Forty people with IC will complete a set of three walking tests on two separate occasions;
once whilst wearing the unloading shoes, and once whilst wearing some normal shoes. The
participants will then be given a pair of unloading or normal shoes to wear for two weeks,
after which we will collect information on how acceptable the shoes were to wear via a
survey of all participants and one-to-one interviews with a subset of participants.
Study design This is a single-centre, randomised crossover study with a qualitative
component. Forty patients will be recruited from York Hospital. Participants will be asked
to perform walking assessments on two week days within a maximum period of two weeks.
Participants will be randomly assigned to complete walking assessments whilst wearing
unloading shoes on day 1, followed by walking assessments whilst wearing control shoes on
day 2, or vice versa. All participants will then be given the unloading or control shoes to
wear for two weeks, after which they will complete a survey about how acceptable the shoes
were to wear. A sub-sample of participants will also be interviewed about the acceptability
of the shoes.
Study setting Recruitment for this study will take place at York Hospital, York, United
Kingdom. Study assessments will take place at York St John University.
Unloading shoe The design of the "unloading" shoe to be used in this research will be a
modern style of trainer-type shoe with a cosmetically-shaped rocker sole incorporated. The
rocker sole will comprise of three circular curves whose arc centres are positioned at the
anatomical ankle, hip and knee respectively; assuming a vertical lower limb. This is
designed to influence the line of action of the ground reaction force to pass close to the
anatomical joint centres and so reduce the moments needed to be generated for ambulation by
the muscles acting across those joints in the lower limb. Additionally it is designed to
place the ankle into a relatively plantarflexed position where the ankle plantarflexors use
less energy than for instance when placed in dorsiflexion. This is in order to unload the
calf muscles by providing a simultaneous reduction in ankle range of motion in relative
plantarflexion but still moving with a near-normal trajectory. This also optimises the lever
arm between the Achilles tendon and the ankle joint so making propulsion, and therefore calf
muscle power generation, more efficient. Participants will be provided with a pair of
appropriately-sized shoes, which will be produced for this study by an established shoe
manufacturer - Chaneco (www.chaneco.co.uk). To allow participants to habituate to wearing
the shoes before assessment, they will be allowed to walk around in the shoes at a
self-selected pace for at least 5 minutes.
Control shoe During the control condition assessments, participants will wear a pair of
appropriately-sized shoes, which are similar in appearance to the unloading shoes, but do
not contain the altered sole. Again, these will be provided by Chaneco, and a minimum of 5
minutes walking will be allowed for habituation.
Outcome measures Primary outcome measure
• Maximum walking distance during forced-pace walking: Following a rest period of at least
20 minutes, participants will complete a 6-minute walk test in which they will be instructed
to walk as far as possible within 6 minutes. This test simulates community walking better
than treadmill testing, has been recommended as a primary outcome in claudication trials,
and has good inter-day reproducibility (coefficient of variation 10.4%). A straight 30-m
course will be used and the distance walked recorded. A testing checklist and standardised
instructions will be used. The outcome assessor will have no role in the sizing and fitting
of the shoes, in an attempt to keep them blinded, and the verbal test instructions will be
audio-recorded so that we can check the consistency of which the instructions have been
delivered.
Secondary outcome measures
- Pain-free walking distance during usual-pace walking: Following a rest period of at
least 20 minutes, participants will be invited to walk at their usual walking speed
along a straight 30-m course. Their walking speed will be recorded using electronic
timing gates (SMARTSPEED, Fusion Sport). Participants will be instructed to indicate
the point where they first experience claudication pain. The distance walked up until
this point will be recorded.
- Gait biomechanical parameters: Reflective markers will be positioned on anatomical
landmarks of the lower extremities using double-sided sticky tape to allow 3D motion
analysis. Wireless surface electromyography units (Trigno EMG, Delsys, Italy) will also
be attached to the skin overlying the medial and lateral Gastrocnemius and Tibialis
Anterior using double-sided sticky tape to allow the assessment of lower-leg muscle
recruitment patterns during the gait cycle. Participants will walk at their usual pace
along a figure-of-8 circuit. A force plate (9281EA, Kistler) positioned in the central
straight portion of the figure-of-8 will capture kinetic data. The participants will be
naïve to the force plate, to help ensure a natural walking gait. Infra-red 3D optical
motion analysis cameras (Oqus, Qualisys) will capture kinematic data each time a
participant approaches and passes over the force plate. Participants will indicate when
they experience the onset of claudication pain and continue until pain prevents them
walking further. Outcomes include step length, stride length, cadence, velocity and
joint angles, and joint moments and powers of the lower extremities during the three
stages of pain development during walking; pain-free walking, after the onset of pain
and immediately before stopping walking due to pain.
Participant timeline Participants will be required to attend the biomechanics laboratory at
York St John University on 3 occasions: a first "screening" visit for obtaining written
informed consent, confirming eligibility and recording baseline characteristics of the
participant, and two subsequent visits on which the study assessments will be conducted. The
study assessment sessions (i.e. visits 2 and 3) will be identical in composition apart from
that the participants will wear different shoes (unloading or control) during the walking
tests. The first assessment visit must be completed within 4 weeks of the screening visit,
and there will be a maximum of 2 weeks and a minimum of 1 day between assessment visits 1
and 2. After completing the crossover study, half of the participants (n=20) will be given
the unloading shoes and the other half (n=20) the control shoes to wear for 2 weeks. After
this 2-week period, all participants will complete and return a survey about the shoes and
be questioned via telephone about any adverse device effects. A sub-sample (minimum n=12;
control n=6, unloading n=6) will undertake a telephone-based semi-structured interview with
a qualitative researcher. This interview will be conducted within 2 weeks of the end of the
2 week shoe-wearing period. Therefore, the maximum duration that a participant will be
involved in the study from the point of consenting is 10 weeks, and the minimum is 17 days;
however, most participants will most likely be undertaking the study visits across a period
of 4-8 weeks.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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