Shoulder Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Psychomotor Therapy as Complimentary Treatment to Patients With Shoulder Pain - a Randomized Controlled Trial.
Some patients with shoulder pain have decreased body awareness (BA). To some degree, pain
among these patients can be increased due to their lack in BA. Psychomotor therapy is thought
to improve BA and thereby increase the effect of traditional therapy, such as physiotherapy
and exercises.
The aim of this study is therefore to investigate if psychomotor therapy, as a complimenting
treatment to physiotherapy, decreases shoulder patients' function deficits and pain reported
on PRO's, compared to physiotherapy alone.
Study design:
This trial, is a randomised, controlled, observer-blinded superiority trial, with a two-group
parallel design, to be conducted in Denmark. The primary endpoint will be 12 weeks after
baseline. Patients will be randomised to either "Intervention+Usual Care" or "Usual Care"
(block randomization with a 1:1 allocation).
Settings and locations:
Patients will be recruited from the shoulder unit at the outpatient clinic, orthopaedic
department at Hospital Lillebaelt - Vejle Hospital.
Randomisation and allocation concealment:
Patients will be randomly assigned to either of the two groups with a 1:1 allocation as per a
computergenerated randomisation schedule, stratified by administration of concomitant
corticosteroid injection using permuted blocks of random sizes (two to six). The primary
investigator, assessors and administrator of the randomisation procedure will not know block
sizes in order to ensure allocation concealment
Blinding:
Outcome assessors will perform both baseline and followup assessments, and will be kept
blinded from treatment allocation. At the follow-up assessments, patients will be strongly
encouraged not to disclose the components of their intervention programme, in order to keep
the outcome assessor blinded.
Statistical analysis plan:
The primary efficacy analysis performed is assessment of the between-group difference in
change in the DASH score after 12 weeks in the intent-to-treat (ITT) population (all
randomised patients independent of compliance and withdrawals). In the case of missing data
due to dropouts, a non-responder imputation will be applied; a baseline observation carried
forward (BOCF) technique will be used for patients who do not complete the study. For the
primary analyses at week 12, we will use analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) to compare the
progressive high-load exercise group with the low-load exercise group for mean changes from
baseline in the DASH score, as well as the secondary continuous outcomes. The primary model
includes the change from baseline as the dependent variable, with treatment group
(Intervention OR Usual care), corticosteroid status (yes or no) as main effects, with the
baseline score as an additional covariate.
To analyse the longitudinal element of time effects of NRS in the randomized trial (repeated
measures design 1-24 weeks), a linear approach will be used, fitted in SAS software (version
9.3 Service Pack 4; SAS Institute Inc., Cary, North Carolina, United States) using the
procedure 'PROC MIXED' based on restricted maximum likelihood (REML) estimates of the
parameters. The variable 'patient' will be applied as a random effects factor. Assessment of
the treatment and time effects is of exploratory interest for the primary outcome in testing
for a possible interaction, and both treatment and time will be used as systematic factors,
using the baseline value as covariate to reduce random variation and increase power.
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