MedPath

Digital Osteoarthritis Care

Not Applicable
Active, not recruiting
Conditions
Osteoarthritis
Interventions
Behavioral: OA school
Other: Usual care
Other: Virtual Training mobile health application
Registration Number
NCT04767854
Lead Sponsor
Diakonhjemmet Hospital
Brief Summary

Osteoarthritis (OA) is among the most prevalent and costly diseases, with an estimate of $460 billion in all-cause medical costs. It causes pain and reduced physical function, and with no existing cure, the recommended first-line treatment is information, exercise and weight management if indicated. As the prevalence of OA is expected to increase in the coming years, exploring innovative solutions to maintain economical sustainable treatment in the future becomes a necessity. Telerehabilitation, technology which involves providing treatment through information and communication technology, regardless of the patient's geographical location, has shown its potential within cardiac, pulmonary, neurological and musculoskeletal conditions.

Virtual Training (VT) is a generic mobile health application used to deliver digital home exercise programs with text, audio and video support. Through a novel feedback system the therapist is able monitor the patients progress and pain level during exercise. This project aims to investigate, through a randomized controlled trial (RCT), whether the use of the VT-app is as effective as supervised exercise therapy in improving pain, physical function and disease activity in patients with hip and/or knee osteoarthritis. In addition, the investigators want to investigate if the use of the app is more cost effective than supervised exercise therapy, whether the use increases adherence with first line treatment, and whether there are certain characteristics of the patients responding to the intervention.

Detailed Description

The study is a two-armed non-inferiority randomized controlled trial (RCT) situated in the primary care setting in Norway. Participants diagnosed with hip and/or knee OA will be randomized to either exercise therapy via app or usual care. Patients aged 18 years and older presenting with activity-related hip and/or knee pain/complaints and clinical signs and symptoms corresponding to hip and/or knee OA seeking treatment at physiotherapist working in private practice, will be included if eligible for the study.

The research questions are:

1. Is exercise therapy, delivered through a mobile health application (Virtual Training), as effective as supervised exercise therapy in patients with hip and/or knee OA, measured by number of patients classified as responders according to the OMERACT-OARSI responder criteria?

2. Is exercise therapy delivered through Virtual Training more cost-effective regarding health care and medication use than supervised exercise therapy for patients with hip and/or knee OA?

3. Will patients with hip and/or knee OA, using Virtual Training, be more adherent to exercise during the intervention period compared to patients undergoing supervised exercise therapy, and are there any demographic or clinical factors characterizing the OMERACT-OARSI responding patients using Virtual Training?

The primary analysis will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis by comparing the proportion of responders at 6 weeks and 3 months post-intervention according to the OMERACT-OARSI responder criteria in the intervention and the control group using logistic regression analysis. Per-protocol analyses will also be conducted. Difference in secondary outcomes will be assessed using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) on the post-intervention values, with baseline values as covariates.

Cost-effectiveness will be evaluated assessing the difference in health care and medication use and quality of life during 3-month follow-up, reporting the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) reflecting the between-group difference in incremental cost per adjusted life years (QALYs). Between-group difference in adherence to exercise will be assessed using linear regression, while patient characteristics in the intervention group will be assessed using logistic regression. Additional analyses assessing associations between physical activity, efficacy, barriers for exercise and OA-related questions will also be assessed in secondary analyses.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
68
Inclusion Criteria
  • Activity-related hip and/or knee pain/complaints and clinical signs and symptoms corresponding to hip and/or knee OA
  • Access to smartphone or tablet
Exclusion Criteria
  • Neurological disorders
  • Contraindication to physical activity
  • Total hip or knee replacement in the actual joint(s) with no pain/ complaints in the other hip or knee joint(s)
  • Inflammatory rheumatic diseases (e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, spondyloarthritis)
  • Malignant illness or other major conditions (e.g. unstable cardiovascular disorders or lung disease, dementia) that restrict the ability to adhere to the recommended treatment
  • Not understanding the Norwegian language

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
OA school + Virtual Training mobile health applicationOA schoolAfter a clinical examination by the physiotherapist, all patients will receive a 1-2-hour group session of patient education according to guidelines. The intervention group will receive an individually tailored exercise program through the Virtual Training mobile health application. After each exercise the patient score his/her execution of the exercise on a Likert-scale of 1 to 5, judging their effort from very poor to very good. After the session, patients rate their pain on a Numeric Rating Scale from 0 to 10. The patients in the intervention group will be instructed to exercise 3 times per week for 6 weeks. If the patients want to exercise more than 3 times per week, the exercise program will be available in the app once every day.
OA school + usual careUsual careAfter a clinical examination by the physiotherapist, all patients will receive a 1-2-hour group session of patient education according to guidelines. The control group will receive individually tailored supervised exercise therapy by a physiotherapist individually or in a group setting, twice a week for 6 weeks. Additionally, the patients will be motivated to perform one session of home exercise a week, a total of 3 sessions per week
OA school + Virtual Training mobile health applicationVirtual Training mobile health applicationAfter a clinical examination by the physiotherapist, all patients will receive a 1-2-hour group session of patient education according to guidelines. The intervention group will receive an individually tailored exercise program through the Virtual Training mobile health application. After each exercise the patient score his/her execution of the exercise on a Likert-scale of 1 to 5, judging their effort from very poor to very good. After the session, patients rate their pain on a Numeric Rating Scale from 0 to 10. The patients in the intervention group will be instructed to exercise 3 times per week for 6 weeks. If the patients want to exercise more than 3 times per week, the exercise program will be available in the app once every day.
OA school + usual careOA schoolAfter a clinical examination by the physiotherapist, all patients will receive a 1-2-hour group session of patient education according to guidelines. The control group will receive individually tailored supervised exercise therapy by a physiotherapist individually or in a group setting, twice a week for 6 weeks. Additionally, the patients will be motivated to perform one session of home exercise a week, a total of 3 sessions per week
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Number of responders according to OMERACT-OARSI responder criteria6 weeks (end of intervention period)

A patient is classified as a responder if one of the following criteria is fulfilled:

1. High improvement in pain or function from baseline to follow-up

* ≥50% improvement + absolute change of ≥2 in pain, OR

* ≥50% improvement + absolute change of ≥2 in function

2. Improvement in at least two of the three following from baseline to follow-up:

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in pain

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in function

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in the patient´s global assessment of disease activity

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Self-reported self-efficacy, Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale (ASES)18 weeks post randomization

Measured by Arthritis Self-Efficacy Scale: average score in the subelements pain (5 questions) and symptoms (6 questions) on a 5 point Likert scale (very uncertain to very sure). Higher average score indicate higher degree of self-efficacy.

Fatigue18 weeks post randomization

Last week's experience of fatigue is measured on a Numeric rating scale from 0 (No fatigue) to 10 (Worst imaginable fatigue).

Knee pain and function, Knee disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS)18 weeks post randomization

Result in the last week disability on five subscales; pain (9 items, scale 0-36), symptoms (7 items, scale 0-28), function in daily living (17 items, scale 0-68), function in sport and recreation (5 items, scale 0-20) and quality of life (4 items, scale 0-16). Items are scored by a five-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (least severe) to 4 (most severe). Total sum-score and subscale sum-scores will be converted to normalized scores ranging from 0 (extreme disability) to 100 (no disability)

Self-reported physical activity, International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form (IPAQ)18 weeks post randomization

Measured by The International Physical Activity Questionnaire-Short Form: Amount of time (minutes per week/day) spent on sitting, walking, and moderate- and vigorous intensity physical activity the last week (0-7 days). Results are reported as MET-scores and are categorized into categorical score of low, moderate or high level of physical activity.

Usability of mobile health application, System Usability Scale (SUS)6 weeks (end of intervention)

Usability of the Virtual Training health application for patients, measured by the System Usability Scale. 10 item questionnaire with five response options for respondents; from strongly agree to strongly disagree

Change in disease activityBaseline and 18 weeks post randomization

Change in disease activity from baseline is reported on a 7 point Likert scale rating from Very much worse to Very much better.

General digital competenceBaseline

19 questions concerning general digital competence, evaluated on a 4 point Likert-scale ranging from very difficult to very easy. Included also an option of answering Don't know.

Number of responders according to OMERACT-OARSI responder criteria18 weeks post randomization

A patient is classified as a responder if one of the following criteria is fulfilled:

1. High improvement in pain or function from baseline to follow-up

* ≥50% improvement + absolute change of ≥2 in pain, OR

* ≥50% improvement + absolute change of ≥2 in function

2. Improvement in at least two of the three following from baseline to follow-up:

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in pain

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in function

* ≥20% improvement + absolute change ≥1 in the patient´s global assessment of disease activity

Physical performance test, 30 seconds sit to stand test (30 sec STS)6 weeks (end of intervention period)

Number of repetitions in the 30 seconds sit to stand-test

Health-related quality of life, EuroQoL (EQ5D-5L)18 weeks post randomization

Health-related quality of life is measured by the EQ5D-5L questionnaire. Patients are asked to answer their ability to perform walking, personal care and activities of daily life on a 5 point Likert scale from no difficulties to not able to. Pain and anxiety/depression is measured on a 5 point Likert scale from no pain to very strong pain, and no anxiety/depression to extremely anxious/depressed. General experience of health is measured from 0 (worst health) to 100 (best health) on a numeric rating scale.

Diagnose specific pain experience18 weeks post randomization

Last week's experience of pain is measured on a Numeric rating scale ranging from 0 (No pain) to 10 (Worst imaginable pain).

Suitability of using an app in exercise therapy6 weeks (end of intervention)

Suitability of using an app in exercise therapy evaluated on a visual analog scale ranging from very unsuitable to very suitable (0-10). Question only concerns patients in intervention arm.

Self reported goal achievement, Patient-specific functional scale (PSFS)18 weeks post randomization

Patients will address one to three activities they have problems performing due to osteoarthritis. The degree of difficulty with performing these activities is rated from 0 (cannot perform the activity) to 10 (no problems)

Hip pain and function, Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS)18 weeks post randomization

Result in the last week disability on five subscales; pain (10 items, scale 0-40), symptoms (5 items, scale 0-20), function in daily living (17 items, scale 0-68), function in sport and recreation (4 items, scale 0-16) and quality of life (4 items, scale 0-16). Items are scored by a five-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (least severe) to 4 (most severe). Total sum-score and subscale sum-scores will be converted to normalized scores ranging from 0 (extreme disability) to 100 (no disability)

Anxiety and depression, Hopkins symptom checklist (HSCL-5)18 weeks post randomization

Symptoms of anxiety and depression is measured by the short form of the Hopkins symptom checklist. Patients answers on five statements is used to measure general symptoms of anxiety and depression from the last 14 days, answers ranging from Not at all to Very much. Total sum score is (0-20) is calculated, higher score indicating greater symptoms of anxiety and depression.

Social participation18 weeks post randomization

Limitations in social activities or contact with family, friends, neighbours or others last 14 days is reported on the social participation-subscale of the COOP/WONCA Functional Assessments Charts. Reported on a 5 point Likert scale ranging from Not at all to Very much, with Very much indicating greater limitations in social contact.

Usage of medication18 weeks post randomization

Usage of medications last three months. Measured in dosage and frequency.

Disease activity18 weeks post randomization

Last week's experience of disease activity is measured on a Numeric rating scale ranging from 0 (Good, no symptoms) to 10 (Very bad).

Exercise self-efficacy18 weeks post randomization

Measured by the Exercise self-efficacy scale containing the subscales self-efficacy for exercise, barriers to exercise, benefits of exercise and the impact of exercise on OA. Each subscale contains 3-8 questions relevant to the topic, with a 5-point Likert scale ranging from strongly disagree to strongly agree. A sum score of the subscales is calculated, ranging from 20 to 100, with higher scores indicating less barriers and greater self-efficacy with physical activity.

Use of health care services18 weeks post randomization

Usage of health care services is measured by number of consultations to general practioner, medical specialist, physical therapist, occupational therapist and Healthy Life Centres, and number of x-rays and MRI's undertaken, last three months.

Satisfaction with use of app in exercise therapy6 weeks (end of intervention)

Satisfaction with use of app in exercise therapy evaluated on a visual analog scale ranging from very little satisfied to very satisfied (0-10). Question only concerns patients in intervention arm.

Trial Locations

Locations (13)

Laguneparken fysioterapi/Arna fysikalske

🇳🇴

Bergen, Norway

Sandviken fysioterapi og trening

🇳🇴

Bergen, Norway

Trimmen

🇳🇴

Drammen, Norway

Sentrum Fysioterapi

🇳🇴

Gjøvik, Norway

Ace Treningssenter

🇳🇴

Indre Østfold, Norway

Trøgstad fysioterapi

🇳🇴

Indre Østfold, Norway

Nittedal fysikalske institutt

🇳🇴

Nittedal, Norway

Ski Fysioterapisenter

🇳🇴

Ski, Norway

Physiotherapist Stein Listaul

🇳🇴

Notodden, Norway

Aktifys Institutt

🇳🇴

Oslo, Norway

Furuset Fysioterapi

🇳🇴

Oslo, Norway

Røa Centrum Fysioterapi og Akupunktur

🇳🇴

Oslo, Norway

Skiptvet Fysikalske

🇳🇴

Skiptvet, Norway

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