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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05887752
Other study ID # CE AVEC 286-2023-DISP-AUSLIM
Secondary ID MRI_47-2023
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date June 5, 2023
Est. completion date April 2025

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute S.p.A.
Contact Ilaria Baroncini, MD
Phone +39 0542 632811
Email ilaria.baroncini@montecatone.com
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In patients with Spinal Cord Injury (SCI), trunk and therefore postural control (both in statics and dynamics) are impaired, often with strong consequences on daily life activities. Therefore, improvement and reinforcement of trunk control are primary rehabilitation (rehab) goals. For the evaluation of trunk control in SCI people, still today no tests and scales are definable as gold standards. Nowadays, for evaluation and rehab purposes of trunk control, balance and proprioception, in both sitting and standing positions, conventional rehabilitation can be supplemented with robotic treatments, e.g. through the Hunova® device (by Movendo Technology). Several studies have demonstrated that conventional rehab associated with robotic training is able to influence functional and motor outcomes in stroke patients, while little evidence is available on SCI patients, also on the number of robotic sessions needed. The present randomized controlled study primarily aims to demonstrate the effects on trunk control of an integrated rehab treatment (standard plus Hunova®), compared to the standard alone and to gain evidence on the better rehabilitation scheme in terms of number of Hunova® sessions. The correlation between the variation of trunk control, measured by the output data of the Hunova® device itself - ideally more objective - and that assessed through a validated clinical scale, will also be estimated.


Description:

In SCI patients trunk and therefore postural control (both in statics and dynamics) are impaired, often with strong consequences on daily life activities. Postural control is defined as the ability to maintain balance despite internal and external perturbations, with the aim of bringing the person's barycenter within his standing area. Therefore, improvement and reinforcement of trunk control are primary rehab goals. For the evaluation of trunk control in SCI people, still today no tests and scales are definable as gold standards. Only a few are considered as more reliable, some of them suitable for acute/subacute SCI, some others for chronic SCI. In some published studies, inertial sensors have been used for a more precise evaluation of the Center of Pressure (COP), of the sway area, in relation to the trunk control, but further validation studies are needed. The use of more objective tools could provide additional information on the behavior of SCI people on postural control, thus not only on muscle strength. Of particular interest are the less or more complex compensation strategies implemented and the muscle activation patterns involved in trunk control, assessable through e.g. surface electromyography. Nowadays, for rehab purposes of trunk control, balance and proprioception, in both sitting and standing position, conventional rehab can be supplemented with robotic treatments, e.g. through the Hunova® device (by Movendo Technology). Several studies have demonstrated that conventional rehab associated with robotic training is able to influence functional and motor outcomes in stroke patients, while little evidence is available on SCI patients, also on the number of robotic sessions needed. The same Hunova® device also allows parameters evaluation by means of its output data. The present randomized controlled study primarily aims to demonstrate the effects on trunk control of an integrated rehab treatment (standard plus Hunova®), compared to the standard alone and to gain evidence on the better rehab scheme in terms of number of Hunova® sessions. The correlation between the variation of trunk control, measured by the output data of the Hunova® device itself - ideally more objective - and that assessed through a validated clinical scale, will also be estimated. Randomization will be stratified, based on SCI lesion completeness. A 1:1 allocation ratio will be used for each stratum.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 78
Est. completion date April 2025
Est. primary completion date March 2025
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Spinal Cord Injury of any etiology; - American Spinal Injury (AIS) grade A or B and American Spinal Injury Association (ASIA) neurological level T1 or below; alternatively AIS grade C or D and ASIA neurological level C4 or below; - stable clinical conditions; - maximum distance from the SCI event: 6 months; - ability to maintain a sitting position for at least 1h continuously; - subjects capable and collaborating, able to give in person their informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: - wearer of tracheal cannula, with the need for bronchoaspiration; - wearer of spine orthosis; - instability or significant deformity of the spine and/or of the lower limbs; - presence of paraosteoarthropathy (POA) in development/inflammatory phase; - presence of ischial Pressure Lesion (PL) of stage = 3, according to the National Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel / European Pressure Ulcer Advisory Panel (NPUAP/EPUAP) classification; - need for a lifter for patient transfer; - body weight = 150 kg.

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Other:
Standard rehabilitation
Carried out 3h/day, 5 days/week at the Montecatone Institute. It implies a multiprofessional approach through: physiotherapy; occupational therapy; sports rehabilitation.
Device:
Hunova® rehabilitation
Performed in a dedicated gym of the Montecatone Institute, 1 hour/day, 5 days/week, in the presence of a physiotherapist. Depending on the improvement of the person and of his skills acquisition, the degree of tilting of the Hunova® seat in the various planes may vary.

Locations

Country Name City State
Italy Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute S.p.A. Imola BO

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Montecatone Rehabilitation Institute S.p.A.

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Italy, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change of trunk control after 10 sessions of Hunova® rehabilitation Evaluation of the efficacy of Hunova® rehabilitation for 10 consecutive sessions (2 weeks treatment period), in addition to the Standard rehab treatment, compared to the Standard treatment only, in terms of improvement of trunk control (both in statics and dynamics), while seated. The validated Trunk Control Test clinical measurement scale for SCI people (TCT-SCI) is employed Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline
Primary Change of trunk equilibrium after 10 sessions of Hunova® rehabilitation Evaluation of the efficacy of Hunova® rehabilitation for 10 consecutive sessions (2 weeks treatment period), in addition to the Standard rehab treatment, compared to the Standard treatment only, in terms of ability to adapt to external postural perturbations. The validated Trunk Control Test clinical measurement scale for SCI people (TCT-SCI) is employed Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Change of trunk control after 20 versus 10 Hunova® rehab sessions Evaluation of the efficacy of Hunova® treatment for a prolonged period of 20 sessions (4 weeks), compared to a basic treatment of 10 sessions (2 weeks), in terms of improvement of trunk control (both in statics and dynamics), while seated. The validated TCT-SCI scale is employed for assessments Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Change of trunk equilibrium after 20 versus 10 Hunova® rehabilitation sessions Evaluation of the efficacy of Hunova® treatment for a prolonged period of 20 sessions (4 weeks), compared to a basic treatment of 10 sessions (2 weeks), in terms of improvement of ability to adapt to postural perturbations. The validated TCT-SCI scale is employed for assessments Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Comparison between trunk control measurements obtained by Hunova® and a validated clinical scale Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between measures of trunk control improvement, given by the Hunova® device itself, and operator-dependent measures obtained through a validated clinical scale (TCT-SCI) Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Estimation of correlation between change of trunk control and functional activities - self care Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between improved trunk control (measured by the TCT-SCI scale) and the improvement in functional activities (measured through the Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM) scale, version III, section "Self-care") Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Estimation of correlation between change of trunk control and functional activities - overall mobility Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between improved trunk control (measured by the TCT-SCI scale) and the improvement in functional activities (measured by a physician through the Spinal Cord Independence Measure (SCIM) scale, version III, section "Overall mobility"); Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Estimation of correlation between change of trunk control and patients' self-perception of performances in functional activities Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between the change of trunk control (measured by the TCT scale) and the change of patient's self-perception of the performance (measured by the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure questionnaire - COPM) of those functional activities self-perceived as relevant Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Estimation of correlation between change of trunk control and patients' satisfaction with performances in functional activities Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between the change of trunk control (measured by the TCT scale) and the change of patients' satisfaction with the performance (measured by the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure questionnaire - COPM) of those functional activities self-perceived as relevant Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Estimation of correlation between change of trunk control and patients' quality of life Estimation, during and after the rehabilitation period, of the correlation between the change of trunk control (measured by the TCT scale) and the change of quality of life perceived by the study subjects (measured by the questionnaire developed by the World Health Organization of the Quality of Life assessment, shorter version - WHOQOL-BREF) Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Change of the COP area as a function of SCI neurologic categories Analysis of the variation of the Centre Of Pressure (COP) area during and after the rehabilitation period, stratified by the following SCI categories: complete paraplegia with high thoracic SCI (neurological level =T6), complete paraplegia with low thoracic SCI (neurological level Baseline (initial assessment); 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Change of activity patterns in muscles involved in trunk control, assessed by electromyography Evaluation of the variation of muscle activity patterns of the muscles contributing to the maintaining of trunk control (latissimus dorsi, trapezius, latissimus pectoralis, erector spinae), between the beginning and the end of the 4-week rehab period under study. Measurements will be carried out through surface dynamic electromyography Baseline (initial assessment); 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Tolerability of the Hunova® rehab treatment Self-patient's perception of the fatigue during the treatment with Hunova®, associated with the Standard rehabilitation treatment, for trunk control. Assessments are carried out through an in-house developed, self-administered questionnaire at the end of the 4-week rehab period under study For intervention arm: 2 weeks after Baseline; 4 weeks after Baseline. For comparator arm: 4 weeks after Baseline
Secondary Satisfaction of the Hunova® rehab treatment Patient's satisfaction with the Hunova® treatment associated with the Standard rehabilitation treatment for trunk control. Assessments are carried out through an in-house developed questionnaire, administered by a physiotherapist, at the end of the 4-week rehab period under study Time Frame: 4 weeks after Baseline
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