Peripheral Arterial Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Pain Management and Patient Education for Physical Activity in Intermittent Claudication (PrEPAID): Feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial
Peripheral Arterial disease is a common condition which causes narrowing of the arteries. The most common symptom that patients with PAD experience is Intermittent Claudication (IC), pain in the lower limb(s) on exertion, which is relieved by rest. IC reduces patients' quality of life (QoL) by limiting their ability to walk and engage in daily activities. Regular exercise and physical activity (PA) are central to the management of PAD and help to improve walking distances and reduce the risks associated with PAD such as heart attack and stroke. However, exercise and PA in this population is often limited due to pain. Investigators have shown that Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) can help to reduce pain and increase walking distance in patients with PAD. Investigators have also shown that educating patients about their condition and helping them to set goals has the potential to increase PA, and quality of life. This study will examine the feasibility of designing a definitive trial that investigates whether TENS can improve the physical activity of patients with PAD when delivered alone and/or alongside a patient education programme.
Peripheral Arterial disease (PAD) affects 2.7 million people in the United Kingdom (UK). The
most common symptom that patients experience is Intermittent Claudication (IC), which is pain
in the buttock, calf or thigh precipitated by exercise and relieved by rest. The underlying
cause of PAD is atherosclerosis, which leads to arterial stenosis, inadequate blood flow and
build-up of lactic acid during exercise. Patients with IC have impaired quality of life due
to reduced physical capacity. Furthermore, due to the diffuse nature of atherosclerosis and
the involvement of other arterial beds, they have 3-4 times increased mortality compared to
age and sex matched controls.
Patients with symptomatic PAD should receive the same secondary prevention management as
patients with symptomatic coronary artery disease. Improving daily physical activity (PA) is
particularly important in individuals with IC as lower PA levels have been recognised as a
strong predictor of increased morbidity and mortality in this population. Current National
Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines recommend the use of supervised
exercise programmes (SEPs), encouraging patients "to exercise to the point of maximal pain",
as first line treatment. SEPs has been shown to be cost-effective when compared to other
treatment options such as endovascular intervention and surgical revascularisation. However,
while systematic reviews show that SEPs lead to a significant improvement in the absolute
walking distances of patients with IC on a treadmill, it is unclear if this is sustained or
leads to improvement in daily PA. Furthermore, due to the considerable extra resources
required to deliver the recommended 3 months exercise programme (30-45 minutes 3x weekly),
SEPs are not always routinely available to National Health Service (NHS) patients, and time
and travel costs tend to lead to low patient uptake and high attrition rates. Therefore,
investigating the feasibility of using low-cost, patient-centred interventions that can
support increased PA is warranted.
Lack of self-efficacy, attributed to poor understanding of the disease and uncertainty
regarding the importance of exercise, has been shown to be a major barrier to exercise uptake
in this population. Educating patients with IC about their disease pathology and the benefits
of walking is key to enhancing success of secondary prevention strategies for people with IC.
Investigators recently piloted a structured, patient-centred education intervention (SEDRIC)
with the specific aim of educating patients with IC about their condition, improving patient
ownership, and promoting self-managed walking. In addition to improved treadmill walking
distances, investigators found out that there was a trend for patients to increase their
daily PA.
For patients with IC to gain benefits of secondary prevention, exercising beyond the point
when pain occurs is recommended, representing another barrier to engagement in PA. Despite
this, investigators' systematic review found that pain management as a route to facilitate
exercise and PA has rarely been explored. Recent interest has focused on the use of TENS (a
low-cost, non-invasive pain management device) to improve angiogenesis, muscle function, pain
and walking distances in patients with IC. TENS has a strong placebo effect in pain
conditions, and testing effectiveness against placebo is advocated. In a proof-of-concept
pilot study, Investigators demonstrated that TENS could significantly improve pain and
increase treadmill walking distances above placebo levels. Our exploratory study also
established that home use of TENS was both acceptable and provided self-reported improvement
in PA in individuals with IC.
Although patient-centred education (SEDRIC) and TENS have both demonstrated potential to
improve daily PA in people with IC, the use of these components in combination has not
previously been evaluated. Investigators therefore propose a 2 x 2 (TENS versus placebo TENS
x SEDRIC versus no additional education) feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial (RCT) that
will compare use of TENS against placebo TENS with and without a patient-centred education
programme.
Investigators have conducted a series of pilot studies underpinning both aspects of the
intervention. Investigators have demonstrated in an experimental lower limb ischaemic pain
model in healthy volunteers (n=28) that TENS significantly reduced onset of pain (by 29
seconds; 23%), tolerance of pain (by 203 seconds; 53%) and the pain endurance (by 173
seconds; 67%), compared to placebo TENS. Following this, in a proof-of-concept pilot study,
investigators demonstrated that TENS when applied to patient with IC exercising on a
treadmill (n=40) significantly improved absolute claudication distance (ACD) above placebo
levels (approx. mean individual increase in ACD of 40%, p=.025, r= .53). Our phase 2 study
also established that home use of TENS was both acceptable and provided self-reported
improvement in PA in individuals with IC. Investigators have not assessed the ability of TENS
to improve ACD when used during daily life.
Similarly, this research group developed and piloted SEDRIC, a structured, patient-centred
education intervention with the specific aim of educating patients about their condition,
improving patient ownership, and promoting self-managed walking. Investigators found that in
patients with PAD (n=14), treadmill walking distances (30%) and quality of life (32%)
improved from baseline after 6 weeks of structured education, and there was a trend for
patients to increase their daily PA (approx. 8% change from baseline).
The aim is to determine the feasibility of electrical stimulation via a low-cost CE-marked
device used within a patient centred education programme to improve walking distances in
patients with PAD.
The following research questions will be answered by this project:
1. What is the feasibility (i.e. recruitment and retention rates, adherence, safety, sample
size for a definitive trial, potential for effectiveness) of conducting a definitive RCT
comparing TENS with and without patient-centred education?
2. How acceptable are TENS and patient-centred education as interventions on their own or
in combination in patients with IC?
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