Exercise Therapy for People With a Diabetic Foot Ulcer - a Feasibility Study
- Conditions
- Diabetic Foot UlcerUlcer HealingDiabetic FootWound Healing DisorderUlcer Foot
- Interventions
- Other: Exercise Therapy
- Registration Number
- NCT05101473
- Lead Sponsor
- Holbaek Sygehus
- Brief Summary
The aim of this feasibility study is to evaluate a 12-week exercise intervention in people with an active diabetic foot ulcer through pre-defined research progression criteria (participant recruitment and retention, duration of the collection of outcome measures, adherence to the exercise programme, and adverse events), besides participant and physiotherapist feedback, self-reported outcomes and objective measurements in preparation for a potential future RCT.
The primary study hypothesis is that exercise therapy for people with an active diabetic foot ulcer will have high participant recruitment and adherence to treatment and that it does not affect wound healing negatively.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 3
- Adults aged 18 years or above
- Diabetes mellitus
- Non-surgical ulcer located distal to the malleoli
- Willingness to participate in a 12-week supervised exercise therapy intervention twice a week
- Prescribed with a therapeutic shoe, orthopaedic specialist shoe from the outpatient clinic or a specialized podiatrist.
- Dementia or other reasons that cause inability to give informed consent
- People that are wheelchair-bound
- People with a prescribed cast or walker boot
- Unable to understand Danish.
- Diagnosed with or awaiting evaluation of suspected acute phase Charcot arthropathy or osteomyelitis
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SINGLE_GROUP
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Exercise therapy Exercise Therapy Exercises will be performed with minimal weight bearing on foot soles, as recommended in the literature for people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Participant retention 12-week follow up. will be evaluated by the number of participants showing up at 12-week follow up.
Recruitment rate 6 month will be analysed by dividing number of included participants (n = 15) by the number of months it took to include them (calculated from study start until the 15th participant is recruited).
Adverse events 12-week follow up. Safety will be assessed based on observed and patient-reported adverse events, and their relatedness to the index ulcer and to the exercise program.
Minor adverse events will cover muscle soreness or post-exercise fatigue. Whereas serious adverse events will cover all negative events related to the foot ulcer, and cover life- threatening events, disability, or permanent damageParticipant and physiotherapist feedback 12-week follow up. will be provided at 12-week follow up on a custom-made interviews with open questions on acceptability of assessment procedures, treatment experience, and feedback about the supervised sessions and potential adverse events
30-second chair-stand test 12-week follow up. To test leg strength and endurance of participants the 30-second chair-stand test will be performed at baseline and at the last day of follow-up.
Tandem Test 12-week follow up. Balance will be evaluated with the Tandem Test at baseline and at the last day of follow-up.
Wound-QoL 12-week follow up. Participants are asked to fill out the the Wound-QoL questionnaires in paper form at baseline and at the last day of follow-up
The Wound-QoL consists of 17 items that can be combined into three individual multi-item domains: Body, Psyche and Everyday life as well as a single-item domain on EconomyEC-5D-5L 12-week follow up. Participants are asked to fill out the Danish versions of the patient-reported outcome measures (PROM) EQ-5D-5L in paper form at baseline and at the last day of follow-up.
The EQ-5D- 3L includes the European Quality of life visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) where the patient's own health 'today' is rated between 0 (worst imaginable health) and 100 (best imaginable health)4x10-meter fast-paced walk test 12-week follow up. The 40 m FPWT is a test for performance on the activity short-distance walking. The test will be performed at baseline and at the last day of follow-up.
Exercise adherence 12-week follow up. will be evaluated using exercise logs completed at each session by the physiotherapist covering load and intensity. Adherence will be calculated by counting number of exercise sessions completed in the exercise log, divided by 24 planned sessions, presented in percentage.
Ulcer size 12-week follow up. Ulcer size measurement is assessed on digital images with standardized measuring tape from participants last to the outpatient clinic visit prior to baseline and from participants last to the outpatient clinic visit to last day of follow-up. The measurement is a standard measurement in the outpatient clinic at every participant visit
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
SUH Køge
🇩🇰Køge, Denmark