Hospital- and Home-based Supervised Exercise Versus UNsupervised Walk Advice For Patients With InTermittent Claudication
NCT ID: NCT02341716
Last Updated: 2022-05-06
Study Results
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Basic Information
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UNKNOWN
NA
165 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2014-09-30
2022-06-30
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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New techniques (GPS and accelerometers) enable measurement of physical activity and training in home environment. The use of such techniques could facilitate home-based (HET) instead of hospital-based supervised exercise (SET) therapy by providing the caregiver data that could be used for feedback to the patient in order to obtain optimal patient benefit by the exercise therapy. This raises hope that results of and the long-term compliance to exercise therapy may improve.
Aim: in patients with intermittent claudication (IC) who do not require invasive treatment evaluate walking performance, HRQoL, fulfillment of patient-defined goals with treatment, walking impairment, long-term compliance to exercise therapy, physical activity and cost-effectiveness for different exercise therapy modalities in order to define the most effective and cost effective treatment.
One hundred and sixty-five IC patients requesting treatment for their IC symptoms in the vascular surgical departments of Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Södra Älvsborg Hospital, Sweden and in whom invasive treatment is not considered necessary are randomized (computerized adaptive stratified randomization) to
1. WA with Nordic Poles (NP) + best medical treatment (BMT), or
2. WA with NP + BMT + SET, or
3. WA with NP + BMT + HET
All randomized patients are recommended outdoor walking with NP at least 30 minutes at least three times per week. The SET group in addition receives in-hospital muscle exercise therapy in a group supervised by a physiotherapist three times weekly during six months. The HET group patients perform the same muscle exercise therapy at home with feedback every 14th day from a physiotherapist during six months. After the six months of supervised exercise therapy, the SET and HET patients are recommended to continue the same muscle exercise therapy at home, but without feedback, between seven and 12 months. The patients are followed by a blinded observer (physiotherapist unaware of the patient´s randomized group) at three, six and 12 months.
Primary outcome: change from baseline to 12 months in walking distance during six-minutes-walk-test (6MWT) and co-primary outcome: change from baseline to 12 months in health-related quality of life (SF36).
Secondary outcomes: walking impairment as measured by the Walking Impairment Questionnaire (WIQ), fulfillment of patient-defined goals (Patient-Specific-Functional Scale), physical activity (accelerometer), compliance to exercise therapy (patient diary), disease-specific HRQoL (VascuQol) and cost-effectiveness. Also change over time (baseline to three, baseline to six and six to 12 months) is studied.
It is important to determine whether the supervised exercise therapy modalities (SET and HET) have equivalent results and are better than WA with NP and BMT alone. The trial is designed to answer the question whether HET is not significantly less clinically effective as SET and whether SET is more clinically effective than WA with NP and BMT. The study started in September 2014, inclusion is expected to stop in September 2016 and end of follow-up is September 2017.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Walk advice
All WA patients receive best medical treatment (BMT) including control of risk factors for arteriosclerosis, simvastatin 40 mg daily, aspirin 75 mg daily and are recommended outdoor walking with Nordic Poles at least 30 minutes at least three times per week. The WA patients are unsupervised during the study period and are followed by a blinded observer at baseline, three, six and 12 months.
WA
Walk advice with Nordic Poles and best medical treatment
Hospital-based supervised exercise
All SET patients receive the same basic treatment as WA patients: best medical treatment (BMT) including control of risk factors for arteriosclerosis, simvastatin 40 mg daily, aspirin 75 mg daily and recommendation of outdoor walking with Nordic Poles at least 30 minutes at least three times per week. The SET group in addition receives three times weekly during six months in-hospital muscle exercise therapy in a group supervised by a physiotherapist. After the six months of supervised exercise therapy, the SET patients are recommended to continue the same muscle exercise therapy at home, but without feedback, between seven and 12 months.
SET
Walk advice with Nordic Poles, best medical treatment and hospital-based supervised exercise therapy
Home-based supervised exercise
All HET patients receive the same basic treatment as WA patients: best medical treatment (BMT) including control of risk factors for arteriosclerosis, simvastatin 40 mg daily, aspirin 75 mg daily and recommendation of outdoor walking with Nordic Poles at least 30 minutes at least three times per week. The HET group patients in addition perform the same muscle exercise therapy three times weekly during six months as the SET patients, but in their homes, and are supervised and given feedback by phone calls every 14th day by a physiotherapist. After six months of supervised exercise therapy, the HET patients are recommended to continue the same muscle exercise therapy, but without feedback, between seven and 12 months.
HET
Walk advice with Nordic Poles, best medical treatment and home-based supervised exercise therapy
Interventions
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WA
Walk advice with Nordic Poles and best medical treatment
SET
Walk advice with Nordic Poles, best medical treatment and hospital-based supervised exercise therapy
HET
Walk advice with Nordic Poles, best medical treatment and home-based supervised exercise therapy
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. Symptom duration \> 6 months.
3. Intermittent claudication is the walk limiting condition.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Invasive treatment for intermittent claudication considered necessary within 12 months
3. Inability to understand Swedish, answer questionnaires or perform walk test
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Vastra Gotaland Region
OTHER_GOV
Lennart Jivegård
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Lennart Jivegård
MD, University lecturer
Principal Investigators
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Lennart Jivegård, MD, Lecturer
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Sahlgrenska University Hospital
Locations
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Södra Älvsborgs Hospital
Borås, Västra Götaland County, Sweden
Sahlgrenska University Hospital
Gothenburg, Västra Götaland County, Sweden
Countries
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References
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Sandberg A, Back M, Cider A, Jivegard L, Sigvant B, Nordanstig J. Impact of walk advice alone or in combination with supervised or home-based structured exercise on patient-reported physical function and generic and disease-specific health related quality of life in patients with intermittent claudication, a secondary analysis in a randomized clinical trial. Health Qual Life Outcomes. 2023 Oct 23;21(1):114. doi: 10.1186/s12955-023-02198-8.
Sandberg A, Back M, Cider A, Jivegard L, Sigvant B, Wittboldt S, Nordanstig J. Effectiveness of supervised exercise, home-based exercise, or walk advice strategies on walking performance and muscle endurance in patients with intermittent claudication (SUNFIT trial): a randomized clinical trial. Eur J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2023 May 25;22(4):400-411. doi: 10.1093/eurjcn/zvac070.
Sandberg A, Cider A, Jivegard L, Nordanstig J, Wittboldt S, Back M. Test-retest reliability, agreement, and minimal detectable change in the 6-minute walk test in patients with intermittent claudication. J Vasc Surg. 2020 Jan;71(1):197-203. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2019.02.056. Epub 2019 May 27.
Other Identifiers
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SahlgrenskaUH
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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