Continued Activity During Rehabilitation in Patients With Patellar Tendinopathy

NCT ID: NCT03694730

Last Updated: 2021-03-09

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

15 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2018-03-11

Study Completion Date

2020-04-15

Brief Summary

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This pilot study will evaluate the feasibility of pain-guided activity modification during rehabilitation for patellar tendinopathy. The information provided will be utilized to conduct a larger randomized clinical trial to determine if there is a difference in recovery from patellar tendinopathy during rehabilitation between individuals that use pain-guided activity modification and those that halt all painful activities. Recovery from patellar tendinopathy will be assessed using pain ratings, tendon-specific outcome measures, tendon structure, tendon mechanical properties, and muscle function.

Detailed Description

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Patellar tendinopathy is a chronic, degenerative condition of the patellar tendon that results in pain, altered tendon structure, functional impairments, decreased sports performance, and lost playing time. It commonly affects jumping athletes in sports such as volleyball and basketball. The prevalence of patellar tendinopathy is high, with 11.8-14.4% of recreational and 32-45% of elite volleyball and basketball players reporting symptoms. Although many athletes will seek treatment, 27-49% will experience re-injury and over half of those injured will retire from their sport of choice due to recurrent symptoms. Additionally, the absence of symptoms does not ensure full recovery of tendon health and function, which may contribute to the high rates of recurrence.

Exercise therapy for the treatment of patellar tendinopathy is supported by the highest level of evidence. However, exercise therapy has been found to be ineffective if the patients continue with full sports participation. On the other hand, it is unclear if it is necessary for athletes to completely halt physical activities while undergoing treatment. Absence from sport due to injury has been associated with increased anxiety, depression, and decreased self-esteem. Therefore, it is of interest to maintain sports participation, as long as it does not interfere with injury recovery.

In a randomized controlled trial (RCT) the investigators evaluated if continued running and jumping during treatment with an Achilles tendon-loading strengthening program had an effect on the outcome in patients with Achilles tendinopathy. In this study the investigators found that there were no detrimental effects of being physically active when the level of activity was guided by a pain-monitoring model. However, the impact of pain-guided activity modification has not been investigated in patellar tendinopathy. The proposed pilot study will determine if continued activity, using a pain-monitoring model, is feasible during treatment for patients with patellar tendinopathy. Furthermore, the investigators will evaluate if there is a negative effect on recovery of symptoms, tendon structure and mechanical properties, and functional recovery when adding continued physical activity compared to rest during exercise therapy treatment. To achieve this objective, the investigators will conduct a RCT comparing patients with patellar tendinopathy that are allowed to continue sports participation during treatment, using a pain-monitoring model, to those that are not allowed to participate in activities that cause pain.

Aim 1 is to evaluate feasibility by examining compliance and satisfaction with continued sports participation, guided by a pain-monitoring model, compared to refraining from sports participation during treatment. This will provide critical information to determine if a larger randomized clinical trial is feasible and if the study protocol needs to be modified. Aim 2 is to evaluate if there is a difference in change over time in symptoms, tendon structure and mechanical properties, and function between the two interventions.

This study will be the first to evaluate continued sports participation, guided by a pain-monitoring model, during rehabilitation in patients with patellar tendinopathy. The results from this study will play a critical role in achieving the long-term research goal of understanding of how to develop tailored treatments for patients with tendon injury. Ultimately this work will inform clinician recommendations regarding activity modification and potentially, limit the negative psychosocial impacts of the injury.

Conditions

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Patellar Tendinopathy Patellar Tendinitis Patellar Tendon Pain Patellar Tendinosis Jumper's Knee

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Two treatment groups receiving different activity modification instructions.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Pain-guided Activity Modification

Participants in the Pain guided Activity Modification group will receive an exercise program consisting of progressive patellar tendon loading exercises Outside of physical therapy treatment, these participants will modify activity based on the Pain-Monitoring Model.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Exercise Treatment

Intervention Type OTHER

Exercise treatment will consist of squatting and knee extension exercises, designed to progressively load the patellar tendon (Heavy-Slow Resistance protocol). A pain-monitoring model is used to guide exercise loads. As the protocol progresses, exercise load is increased while repetitions are decreased.

Pain- Guided Activity Modification

Intervention Type OTHER

Participants sports participation and physical activity will be guided by the Pain-Monitoring Model. Using the Pain-Monitoring Model, patients may participate in activities that cause patellar tendon pain, as long as pain does not exceed 5/10 on the numeric pain rating scale (NPRS) (0 = No pain, 10 = Worst pain imaginable) during or immediately after activity. Additionally, pain should return to pre-activity levels by the following morning and pain should not increase from week-to-week.

Pain-free Activity Modification

Participants in the Pain-free Activity Modification group will receive an identical exercise program to the Pain-guided Activity Modification group. However, participants will not be allowed to participate in activities that cause patellar tendon pain or excessively load the patellar tendon (e.g. jumping) outside of physical therapy treatment.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Exercise Treatment

Intervention Type OTHER

Exercise treatment will consist of squatting and knee extension exercises, designed to progressively load the patellar tendon (Heavy-Slow Resistance protocol). A pain-monitoring model is used to guide exercise loads. As the protocol progresses, exercise load is increased while repetitions are decreased.

Interventions

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Exercise Treatment

Exercise treatment will consist of squatting and knee extension exercises, designed to progressively load the patellar tendon (Heavy-Slow Resistance protocol). A pain-monitoring model is used to guide exercise loads. As the protocol progresses, exercise load is increased while repetitions are decreased.

Intervention Type OTHER

Pain- Guided Activity Modification

Participants sports participation and physical activity will be guided by the Pain-Monitoring Model. Using the Pain-Monitoring Model, patients may participate in activities that cause patellar tendon pain, as long as pain does not exceed 5/10 on the numeric pain rating scale (NPRS) (0 = No pain, 10 = Worst pain imaginable) during or immediately after activity. Additionally, pain should return to pre-activity levels by the following morning and pain should not increase from week-to-week.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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Rehabilitation exercise Physical Therapy treatment

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Physically active individuals with a diagnosis of patellar tendinopathy

Exclusion Criteria

* Injury that limits ability to participate in testing
* History of knee surgery within the last 6 months.
* Injection, shockwave, tenotomy or Ten-X to the patellar tendon within the last 6 months.
Minimum Eligible Age

16 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

40 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University of Delaware

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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University of Delaware

Newark, Delaware, United States

Site Status

Countries

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United States

References

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Sprague AL, Couppe C, Pohlig RT, Snyder-Mackler L, Silbernagel KG. Pain-guided activity modification during treatment for patellar tendinopathy: a feasibility and pilot randomized clinical trial. Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2021 Feb 25;7(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s40814-021-00792-5.

Reference Type RESULT
PMID: 33632313 (View on PubMed)

Related Links

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Other Identifiers

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1217479

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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