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Individualized Physiotherapy and Activity Coaching for Multiple Sclerosis

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Multiple Sclerosis
Interventions
Behavioral: Individualized behavioural physical activity intervention
Registration Number
NCT04027114
Lead Sponsor
University of Saskatchewan
Brief Summary

Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic neurological disease that places a high burden on patients, families and society. Physical activity in MS is associated with improved fitness, symptoms, and function, fewer relapses, and fewer brain lesions on MRI. Saskatchewan has one of the highest rates of MS worldwide, and a recent survey estimated approximately 80% of persons living with MS are not sufficiently active for health benefits. Individuals living with MS recognize the importance of physical activity, but often indicate a lack support, including limited access to professionals knowledgeable about both MS and physical activity. There is a need to identify effective interventions for improving activity levels safely and appropriately. Behaviour change strategies target specific behaviours involved in increasing and maintaining physical activity. The primary objective of this project is to determine if individualized behaviour change strategies delivered by neurophysiotherapists increases physical activity in MS. Participants will be randomly assigned into two groups. The intervention group will receive individualized behaviour change strategies delivered through the support of neurophysiotherapists for 12 months. The wait-list control group will receive usual care for 12 months, and then be offered the intervention for a 6-month period at the end of the study period. The long-term goal of this research is to help decrease the burden of MS by identifying new opportunities for increasing physical activity.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
120
Inclusion Criteria
  • clinically definite MS (diagnosed by a neurologist)
  • patient determined disease steps (PDDS) less than or equal to 6 (i.e. not wheel-chair bound)
  • GLTEQ<24 (not active enough for health benefits)
Exclusion Criteria
  • medical instability (PAR-Q moderate-high risk of exercise-related harm)
  • persons unable to provide consent
  • persons under the age of 18 years old

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Behavioural Physical Activity (PA) interventionIndividualized behavioural physical activity intervention-
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Godin Leisure Time Exercise Questionnaire (GLTEQ) Scorebaseline to 12 months

change in physical activity level. The GLTEQ is a 4-item self-administered questionnaire with the first three questions seeking information on the number of times one engages in mild, moderate and strenuous activity in bouts of at least 15 min duration in a typical week. Total leisure activity score is then calculated based on number of bouts at each intensity multiplied by 3, 5, and 9 metabolic equivalents and summed. A higher score means more physically active.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Multiple Sclerosis Impact Scale version 2 (MSIS-29 v2)baseline to 12 months

change in patient-reported disease-related symptoms measured using MSIS-29 v2 scale. MSIS-29 assess the impact of MS on health related quality of life in terms of physical and psychological well-being. The MSIS-29 v2 is a 29 item self-administered questionnaire. 20 items are associated with a physical scale and 9 items with a psychological scale. Items ask about the impact of MS on day-to-day life in the past two weeks. All items have 4 response options: 1 "not at all" to 4"extremely". Min score=29, max =116 with a higher value indicating more severely impacted

Multiple Sclerosis Self Efficacy Scale (MSSE)baseline to 12 months

change in patient-reported level of confidence regarding components of disease management. The MSSE has 18 items represented by two subscales of Function (9 items) and Control (9 items). Participants rate their confidence from 10-100 where 10 has an anchor of very uncertain, 50 moderately certain, and 100 very certain. A higher score meaning more confident/higher self-efficacy.

Interviews and Exit surveysafter intervention (at 12 month point for intervention group and 18 month for wait-list control) group

experience of participants and interventionists

Intervention Descriptionafter intervention (at 12 month point for intervention group and 18 month for wait-list control group)

a description of interventionist contact time with participant and frequency, method and types of services provided

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Saskatchewan

🇨🇦

Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada

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