Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Community-based Rehabilitation Training After Stroke: a Pilot Randomised Controlled Trial
A pilot study that will evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of procedures to inform the design and delivery of a definitive RCT of ReTrain (which would assess the clinical and cost effectiveness of ReTrain for stroke survivors).
Background and rationale
Residual physical disability is common following discharge from stroke rehabilitation
services. A third of first-time stroke survivors remain physically disabled five years after
their stroke, equivalent to more than 300,000 people in the UK. Stroke services are
traditionally "front loaded" with provision tailing off a few months after stroke. However,
people with stroke report a variety of unmet long-term needs and a sense of being abandoned
by NHS services. The UK National Stroke Strategy recommends that stroke be regarded as a Long
Term Condition and that continuing support is provided for those who need it. This includes
community-based rehabilitation, with an emphasis on personalisation, re-ablement and
self-management of the consequences of stroke. There is good evidence that exercise can
promote functional recovery, enhance adjustment and coping, improve psychological wellbeing,
and reduce the risk of recurrence. Hence stroke guidelines recommend that people with stroke
should regularly engage in specific forms of exercise, however many do not meet these
recommendations. Various personal and environmental factors may account for this:
stroke-related impairments, lack of confidence or knowledge regarding exercise and its
benefits, and inadequate provision of support programmes and facilities. In response,
community-based programmes are being offered. However, these programmes often focus on
fitness rather than function, giving little attention to self-management or to sustaining
behaviour (to ensure benefits are maintained after structured programmes have ended).
National stroke guidelines recommend interventions address functional improvement and
self-management strategies even though a recently updated Cochrane review notes the gap in
evidence regarding these interventions.
An approach called ARNI (Action for Rehabilitation from Neurological Injury) attempts to
address these concerns; it was created specifically for people with stroke and acquired brain
injury who wish to continue their functional recovery.ARNI is not a rigidly-defined programme
but a set of principles and strategies tailored to individual circumstances and contexts. It
is led by registered exercise professionals who have been additionally trained and accredited
by the ARNI institute (http://www.arni.uk.com). In the UK, the NHS, Local Authorities and
other organisations are using ARNI trainers to provide community-based training for stroke
survivors. Our survey of this training included Northeast England, Lancashire, Luton and
Bedfordshire, Milton Keynes, Hillingdon and Cornwall. The survey found that training has been
very positively received by stroke survivors, their families and clinicians but it varied in
content and delivery. Reports of benefits by the broadcaster Andrew Marr have also increased
public awareness of ARNI. However the evidence for ARNI remains largely anecdotal, it may
only work for a selected few and the approach is difficult to replicate. There is a need for
a more detailed cohesive specification of ARNI that could be rigorously evaluated and
replicated. Furthermore a stroke survivor participating in our Institution's research
question generation process asked if ARNI worked but as yet there have been no randomised
controlled trials (RCTs) of this intervention. Thus we have followed the Medical Research
Council's framework for the development and evaluation of complex interventions and
undertaken five linked preliminary studies: 1) a survey of current ARNI provision in the UK;
2) a comparison of the ARNI approach with relevant stroke practice guidelines, 3)
before-and-after studies of both group-based and 4) one-to-one training and 5) focus groups
conducted with our participants. From this work we have designed a programme called ReTrain
(Rehabilitation Training) which is based on core ARNI principles and informed by best
practice guidelines for stroke. Before undertaking a large definitive RCT of ReTrain a pilot
study is needed to address issues of feasibility and acceptability.
Purpose of the study
ReTrain aims to improve (i) functional mobility, (ii) adherence to national guidelines on
post-stroke exercise levels, and (iii) health-related quality of life, for people after
stroke who have been discharged from clinical rehabilitation. A definitive RCT is required to
assess the clinical and cost effectiveness of the ReTrain intervention. The purpose of this
pilot study is to assess to feasibility of such a trial and to evaluate trial procedures to
inform the design of a definitive trial.
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