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Clinical Trials/NCT07522060
NCT07522060
Not yet recruiting
Not Applicable

Early Functional Response as a Predictor of Clinical Outcomes in Hand Rehabilitation: A Prospective Feasibility Study Using a Clinician-Developed Digital Monitoring System

Hacettepe University1 site in 1 country60 target enrollmentStarted: June 15, 2026Last updated:

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Status
Not yet recruiting
Enrollment
60
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Feasibility: PROM Data Completeness

Overview

Brief Summary

This study investigates whether early changes observed during the first weeks of hand and upper extremity rehabilitation can predict patient outcomes months later. In rehabilitation practice, clinicians make numerous decisions each session regarding exercise type, frequency, duration, and treatment approach. Most of these decisions are currently made without systematic longitudinal data. This study addresses three fundamental questions using data collected during routine clinical care: (1) Can the rate of improvement in the first weeks of treatment predict functional status months later, across both session-based and milestone-based time points? (2) Are there meaningfully different recovery profiles among hand rehabilitation patients? (3) Is there measurable variation in clinical decision-making among patients with similar profiles, and does this variation relate to outcomes? A digital patient monitoring platform developed by the principal investigator, a physiotherapist and academic researcher specializing in hand rehabilitation serves as the data collection infrastructure. The platform records standard clinical assessment measures in a structured format and has been in active clinical use at Hacettepe University prior to this study. For research purposes, the system has been expanded to include structured capture of patient-reported outcomes, patient global impression of change, treatment protocol coding, home exercise adherence, and automated calculation of early response metrics.

This is a 12-month prospective observational cohort study enrolling a minimum of 60 patients. Data are stored securely on the university's institutional network. Patients are anonymized using identification codes. The study is subject to Hacettepe University Ethics Committee approval and participant informed consent. Findings are expected to generate evidence supporting data-driven clinical decision-making in rehabilitation and to provide a feasibility foundation for a larger multi-center study.

Detailed Description

The study addresses three research questions: (1) predictive power of early functional response for later clinical outcomes across four cascaded models (M1-M4), (2) classification of patient recovery profiles, and (3) measurement of clinical decision variation. System and methodological details reported in study supplement.

Study Design

Study Type
Observational
Observational Model
Cohort
Time Perspective
Prospective

Eligibility Criteria

Ages
18 Years to — (Adult, Older Adult)
Sex
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

  • Adults aged 18 years or older
  • Hand or upper extremity pathology requiring rehabilitation, including but not limited to: flexor or extensor tendon injuries, peripheral nerve injuries or compression syndromes (including carpal tunnel syndrome, cubital tunnel syndrome), distal radius fractures, metacarpal or phalangeal fractures, joint injuries and instabilities, arthropathy (osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis), trapeziometacarpal osteoarthritis, trigger finger, Dupuytren's disease, DeQuervain tenosynovitis, lateral epicondylitis and post-surgical upper extremity conditions
  • Under clinical responsibility of the principal investigator at the Faculty of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Hacettepe University
  • Expected to attend minimum 8 rehabilitation sessions
  • Able to provide written informed consent

Exclusion Criteria

  • • Active psychiatric illness precluding participation or completion of assessment tools
  • Severe cognitive impairment precluding understanding of patient-reported outcome measures
  • Literacy difficulties preventing self-completion of questionnaires
  • Concurrent enrollment in another interventional clinical study
  • Refusal to provide written informed consent

Arms & Interventions

Hand Rehabilitation Cohort

Adults with hand and upper extremity pathologies undergoing rehabilitation under the clinical responsibility of the principal investigator at Hacettepe University Faculty of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation. Consecutive sampling: all eligible patients enrolled in order of presentation until minimum sample size is reached.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Feasibility: PROM Data Completeness

Time Frame: Throughout the 12-month study period

Proportion of rehabilitation sessions with complete PROM data entries throughout the study period. Success criterion: ≥85% completeness rate.

Model M1: Session-Based Early Response → Session 12

Time Frame: Baseline (session 1) to session 12 (approximately 4-8 weeks)

Predictive Power of Sessions 1-4 Functional Change (ΔS₁-₄) for Session 12 Outcome Association between the early response score (ΔS₁-₄ = mean change in primary PROM per session during sessions 1-4) and primary PROM score at session 12, assessed via linear regression and ROC curve analysis (AUC). Baseline PROM entered as covariate.

Model M2: Month 1 Change → Month 3 Outcome

Time Frame: Baseline to 3-month standardized assessment

Predictive Power of 1-Month Change (Δ₀→₁) for 3-Month Outcome Association between change in primary PROM from baseline to 1-month assessment and PROM score at 3 months, with covariate adjustment for baseline severity. Tests whether early-period change forecasts mid-term outcomes.

Model M4: Month 1 Change → Month 6 Outcome

Time Frame: Baseline to 6-month standardized assessment

Predictive Power of 1-Month Change (Δ₀→₁) for 6-Month Outcome Association between change in primary PROM from baseline to 1-month assessment and PROM score at 6 months. This is the primary cascaded prediction model: can a single early assessment predict medium-to-long-term functional outcomes? Findings will inform evidence-based treatment modification thresholds.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Model M3: Month 3 Change → Month 6 Outcome(Baseline to 6-month standardized assessment)
  • Recovery Profile Classification(Baseline through session 12 (~4-8 weeks))
  • Clinical Decision Variation(Throughout the 12-month study period)
  • Feasibility: Clinician Acceptance(At 3 months and 12 months)
  • MCID Responder Rate(Monthly from baseline to 12 months)
  • Feasibility: Milestone Completion Rate(Throughout the 12-month study period)

Investigators

Sponsor Class
Other
Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Cigdem Ayhan

Professor

Hacettepe University

Study Sites (1)

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