Study Results
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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COMPLETED
NA
38 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2021-10-06
2022-07-30
Brief Summary
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The investigators are seeking to improve outcomes for these patients by comparing different physiotherapy interventions in subsequent trials with standard of care (SoC) physiotherapy. Trial A will compare routine care vs routine care plus MSM physiotherapy attempting to answer the primary research question if MSM on patients with axSpA improves spinal mobility.
In order to recruit patients and obtain outcomes for Trial A (n=70), the investigators will first recruit up to 300 axSpA patients receiving care at the Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases (RNHRD) in Bath into a cohort and observe their standard of care outcomes. This will allow to answer the cohort's research question of "How does SoC physiotherapy in patients with axSpA reflect in data collected routinely on outcomes of the disease?" Patients will be asked to consent to provide routine observational data on their wellbeing, be approached to take part in future trials of interventions which aim to improve outcomes for patients with axSpA, and not be approached unless they are offered the physiotherapy trial intervention. This highly pragmatic method of providing information and seeking consent replicates the informed consent procedures in routine care clinical settings. This study is aimed to last three years, with individual trials of 40-70 participants, ranging between three to six months duration of therapy intervention in addition to routine care.
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Detailed Description
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The investigators will then conduct the first of possibly several embedded pragmatic randomised controlled trials of adjunctive physiotherapy for patients with axSpA: Trial A will compare routine care vs routine care plus manual spinal mobilisation physiotherapy. The hypothesis for trial A assumes manual spinal mobilisation will improve function, decrease pain and decrease disease activity, but primarily increase spinal mobility, as shown in previous trials to be the case when specific parts of the spine received manual mobilisation.
The study design and methodology has been chosen because of its highly pragmatic character in a clinical setting of a chronic condition. Physiotherapy in axSpA consists of a variety of treatment options to research and outcomes for each intervention can be compared to the routinely taken outcome measures across the cohort to identify and compare benefits/challenges of different interventions. The TwiCs design has been shown to be particularly suitable for chronic conditions, where different treatments are provided to inform clinical practice, and therefore the investigators identified this design to be best suited to meet the aims and objectives our study (also see second paragraph above).
The justification for including control arms to a trial:
The control arm is important for comparison of outcomes and to increase the validity of our study. The control arm will receive standard of care as usual (as will the intervention group), without the additional intervention, therefore the difference in results between the groups will indicate the effect of the trial intervention, enabling to inform clinical practice. Additionally, it is very challenging to blind participants and researcher to physiotherapy interventions, so randomisation with a control group gives our study a sound methodology.
Randomisation will be achieved my random computer allocation in a staged (phased) randomisation process. Initially all cohort participants will get screened for eligibility for trial A and if successful, included into the eligible trial cohort. For trial A the investigators aim to recruit 12 participants per stage/batch into the manual mobilisation trial for six batches (up to 70 participants). For each batch, six participants will get randomly selected from the eligible trial cohort to be offered to receive the intervention. The remaining six participants that were not selected will function as controls. On average the investigators will aim to recruit a new batch every two weeks to start the initially more frequent intervention (from biweekly to monthly over six months) in stages. Therefore, all participants should have been randomised and started the trial within the first 3-4 months of the start of the trial. This phased randomisation/ recruitment to the trial is a due to limited resources and time restraints.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Trial A - Intervention Group (manual mobilisation)
Participants will continue to receive routine care and 13 sessions of manual spinal mobilisation will be administered over a 6 months period to compare routine care vs routine care plus manual spine mobilisation physiotherapy.
Manual spinal mobilisation physiotherapy
Manual spinal mobilisation is a physiotherapy technique to improve spinal mobility by gently applying pressure manually on the each segmental vertebrae by hands-on treatment of a physiotherapist.
Trial A - Control Group (routine care)
Participants in control group will continue to receive routine care, and routine care measurements for axial spondyloarthritis will be taken at baseline, 3 months and 6 months plus follow up.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Manual spinal mobilisation physiotherapy
Manual spinal mobilisation is a physiotherapy technique to improve spinal mobility by gently applying pressure manually on the each segmental vertebrae by hands-on treatment of a physiotherapist.
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
* Age \>70
* Pregnancy or breastfeeding
* Any malignancy
* Moderate coexistent other inflammatory conditions (such as rheumatoid arthritis, vasculitis or connective tissue disease, in order to minimise the effect particularly of inflammation). However clinical judgement might be used to judge the severity in some patients as to whether they are safe to be included in a trial.
* Any bridging syndesmophytes in the spine, to avoid the risk of causing vertebral fractures or instability
18 Years
70 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Jane Carter
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS FT
Locations
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Sports Physiotherapy Calne
Calne, UK, United Kingdom
Royal National Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases (RNHRD)
Bath, Wiltshire, United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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PaxSpA V5 28072020
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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