Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Active, not recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT03484182 |
Other study ID # |
HP-00077863 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Active, not recruiting |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 1, 2019 |
Est. completion date |
June 2024 |
Study information
Verified date |
August 2023 |
Source |
University of Maryland, Baltimore |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
This is an online study that involves assessment and training of arm function at home. Stroke
is the leading cause of disability worldwide. Of the annual incidence of stroke (~750,000) in
the USA about 60% fail to recover arm and hand use contributing to reduced quality of life
for survivors and caregivers. How can therapists facilitate the rehabilitation of individuals
with arm movement deficits and increase their quality of life over a long time period? It is
known that principles of treatment including repetition, feedback, challenge and progression
are important for producing recovery. The ability for patients to train at home and manage
their own rehabilitation duration, intensity and progression, via effective self-management
strategies, is vital. What is needed is an effective, easy to use, low cost system that
self-motivates patients to intensively practice their therapy exercises at home while
maintaining elements of repetition, feedback, challenge and progression. In this proposal the
investigators intend to adapt just such a "web-based system" originally designed in the UK.
The first version of the system has shown preliminary efficacy and feasibility in a small
pilot study in UK. The investigators will adapt the system for use in the USA, with the
assistance of consultants from the UK.
The purpose of this study is to investigate the efficacy and feasibility of using a free,
easy to use, interactive web-based upper extremity stroke rehab program on individuals with
stroke who have been discharged from outpatient rehabilitation. The goal is to compare the
home use of the web-based stroke rehab program with that of written exercises in a randomized
controlled trial. The aims/objectives are to (1) adapt the existing system for use in America
including adding bilateral activities and then to assess (2) motor function immediately
before and after six weeks intervention and after 12 weeks follow up in order to support the
efficacy of using this web-based intervention; (3) behavioral changes in motivation and
self-efficacy at the same time points to understand the relationship between behavioral and
motor function changes; (4) perceptions of patients and caregivers of the web-based program
to understand feasibility and barriers to home use; and (5) perceptions of therapists to
understand feasibility and barriers to clinic use.
Description:
Objective 1, Development of the expanded STROKE web program applicable to individuals with
stroke in the USA.
This is a necessary objective to achieve before the investigators can start the trial; but it
has no associated hypothesis. One rationale is to expand the target population in terms of
impairment severity based both on feedback from therapists and on the need to add more
bilateral activities that are important for everyday use. The second rationale is to check
that material is readable and applicable to individuals with stroke in the USA.
Objective 2: To determine the immediate and durable motor function changes from a six-week
web-based stroke rehab program vs. usual written exercise care in individuals discharged from
outpatient therapy after a stroke.
H1: Six weeks of web-based stroke training compared to six weeks of a written home upper limb
exercise program will result in clinically meaningful and statistically significant
improvement in upper extremity function immediately after the intervention and 12 weeks
later.
This primary hypothesis is justified based on the combination of two theoretical constructs
as described earlier. First, there is evidence that web-based programs, based on Self
Determination Theory principles, will show an increase in motivation to exercise vs. a
control with no intervention in non-disabled individuals. Second, since the web-based program
is also based on neuroplasticity and motor learning principles known to improve functional
recovery, and not just physiological improvements, the participants should also improve their
functional recovery rather than merely gain physical activity benefits while maintaining or
even losing their functional level. Third, the pilot feasibility study supports this
hypothesis for the immediate effect and, after the power analysis, for the follow up testing.
Objective 3: To determine the immediate and durable behavioral benefits of a six-week
web-based stroke program vs. standard care in individuals discharged from outpatient therapy
after a stroke.
H2: Six weeks of web-based stroke training compared to six weeks of a written home upper limb
exercise program will result in statistically significant gains in motivation to exercise,
self-efficacy and amount of practice time immediately after the intervention and 12 weeks
later.
This secondary hypothesis explores whether the STRONG program will improve the patients
motivation to exercise and their self-efficacy, while the written exercise program has the
opposite effect, by the end of the intervention. There is evidence from the non-disabled
population that behavioral improvements such as increasing exercise time will occur when
individuals are intrinsically motivated but this has not been shown in the stroke population
using a LifeGuide platform web-based system. Conceptually, the investigators predict that
individuals with stroke will also become intrinsically motivated, because the program
incorporates design details that enhance feelings of autonomy, competence and relatedness.
Therefore, based on SDT, participants will not only have a better functional level but an
increase in self-efficacy, motivation and independence. Specifically, during the 12 weeks
after training, participants in the STRONG web program will demonstrate this by maintaining
an increased amount of practice even though the investigators will have withdrawn our
external support from the therapist (but not the participants ability to communicate with
friends).
Embedded Qualitative Component. Qualitative work is based on inductive reasoning and is
hypothesis generating rather than hypothesis testing. Therefore, the investigators do not
offer specific hypotheses but outline some of the questions that will be asked to give
meaning and a context to the use of the web-based program.
Objective 4: To determine the perceptions of patients/caregivers to the use of a web-based
stroke training program.
Qualitative methods will be used to explore patient and caregiver experiences and perceptions
of using the Web-based system as part of stroke recovery to answer questions such as - In
what ways did the STRONG web program help or hinder their rehabilitation? What did
participants like and dislike about it? How did participants use it and why? What
difficulties did participants have with using it? How could it be better? What did
participants perceive to be the 'added value' of using the STRONG web program over routine
practice alone?
Objective 5: To determine the perceptions of therapists to the use of a web-based stroke
training program.
Qualitative methods will be used to explore therapists' experiences and perceptions of the
STRONG web program in order to answer questions such as - What are the most important/useful
aspects of the STRONG web program. What are the most difficult/problematic aspects of the
STRONG? When would therapists use it and why? Who is it most successful for and why? What
does it add to routine practice? In what ways does it detract from or complicate routine
practice?