PRehab tO PreparE Living Liver Donors for Enhanced Recovery

NCT ID: NCT05431361

Last Updated: 2024-12-16

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

ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

30 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2022-05-04

Study Completion Date

2024-12-12

Brief Summary

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1. to determine if a Phase III RCT of prehab vs usual care for LLDs is feasible (including rates of recruitment, adherence, adverse events, and attrition);
2. to determine what, if any, intervention or trial modifications are warranted for a Phase III RCT; and,
3. to explore estimates of efficacy among donor-centered outcomes (e.g., quality of life, physical function, satisfaction with care) that may form the basis for sample size calculations of a Phase III RCT.

Detailed Description

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Living donor liver transplantation (LDLT) is an established treatment for end-stage liver disease.1 Preserving health and quality of life are priorities of care for living liver donors (LLD) as they receive no direct medical benefit from their donation.1,2 Unfortunately, recent research demonstrates that LLDs experience significant postoperative pain, dysfunction, and adverse psychosocial outcomes that may persist up to several years.3-5 Given the risks and postoperative sequalae associated with LDLT, potential LLDs must undergo a comprehensive and interdisciplinary screening and selection process, including a medical history, laboratory assessments, and physical and psychosocial/psychiatric examinations.1 Yet, despite widely established thresholds for organ donation candidacy, research demonstrates that living liver or kidney donors with lower pre-donation physical and mental health (e.g., higher BMI, fatigue, less physical activity, smoking, mood and anxiety disturbance) are at higher risk for worse physical and mental health, and health-related quality of life up to 12 months after donation.6-8 Moreover, some potential donors may lose donation candidacy for a variety of reasons, including changes in health, increasing anxiety and ambivalence related to the donation, or insufficient support.1,9 Strategies aimed at optimizing the mental and physical health for potential LLDs are therefore appropriate for both the minimization of surgical risks and preservation of candidate pools, but also, are in keeping with the priorities of LDLT - that is, preservation of health and quality of life for LLDs.

Over the last fifteen years, prehabilitation (or 'prehab') has emerged and grown as a feasible, safe, and efficacious strategy to improve preoperative health and contribute to reductions in surgical complications and adverse postoperative outcomes. Prehab has been examined in numerous surgical settings, including oncology10, cardiology11,12, and among solid organ transplant recipients.13-16 Prehab research and clinical application have generally focused on high-risk surgical candidates in the interest of efficient resource allocation given the likelihood for clinically meaningful improvements in outcomes (e.g., reduced surgical complications).17-20 To date, living organ donors have not been targeted recipients of prehab given their relatively low surgical risk due to health screening and selection. However, this is at odds with the philosophy of care for living donors (i.e., to protect against adverse effects) and undervalues the decrement in quality of life that many donors endure. Accordingly, research examining the role and effect of prehab for LLDs has important health and ethical implications.

Given that there have been no studies examining the effect of prehab for LLDs, much uncertainty remains about whether LLDs will enroll, adhere, and be retained in the intervention. Further, while we may surmise what the ideal components of prehab may be for LLDs, this has yet to be examined. Finally, there are no studies assessing the feasibility of conducting a large scale randomized controlled trial (RCT) of prehab for LLDs that could help establish sample sizes, recruitment strategies, and intervention and measurement design elements. Thus, in this trial protocol entitled "PRehab tO PreparE Living Liver Donors for Enhanced Recovery" (PROPELLER), we propose a feasibility RCT of prehab vs usual care for LLDs who are scheduled for LDLT.

Conditions

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Living Donor Liver Transplantation

Keywords

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Prehabilitation

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

randomized 2:1 (intervention:control)
Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Prehabilitation

PREHAB participants will receive a multimodal intervention comprising of exercise, nutrition, and psycho/behavioural/educational support provided by an interprofessional prehab team comprising kinesiologists, dietitians, psychologists, and a previous LLD study partner. To facilitate overall compliance and appropriate adaptation to the home-based intervention components, participants will receive printed material, and a study coordinator will communicate weekly with patients to provide encouragement, monitor adherence, and clarify any questions or concerns.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Prehabilitation

Intervention Type OTHER

A Registered Kinesiologist (RKin) will provide the exercise prescription, consisting of 4-5 days of aerobic exercise training and 2-3 days of resistance exercise training of major muscle groups, during a remotely delivered familiarization session using Microsoft Teams. The 60-minute remote program introduction will include a description and demonstration of all of the exercises that will follow the baseline assessment. Patients will be prescribed an individualized exercise program considering: (1) their exercise preferences, (2) their current physical capacity, (3) previous medical history, and (4) presence of underlying comorbidities, mobility, and skeletal fragility concerns \[NOTE: the location/impact of a tumour is not applicable for PROPELLER as it was in REB#5901, and is thus not included here\]. The participant will have an opportunity to execute the exercises in the remote presence of the RKin who will provide corrective feedback where applicable.

Usual Care

Usual care participants will be instructed to resume typical lifestyle behaviours until the date of the surgery. To standardize exposure to publicly available resources, usual care participants will receive the 24-Hour Movement Guidelines for Adults,33 Canada's Food Guide,27 a list of stress management resources (website, apps, free reading material), and reference to the Smoker's Helpline.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

Interventions

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Prehabilitation

A Registered Kinesiologist (RKin) will provide the exercise prescription, consisting of 4-5 days of aerobic exercise training and 2-3 days of resistance exercise training of major muscle groups, during a remotely delivered familiarization session using Microsoft Teams. The 60-minute remote program introduction will include a description and demonstration of all of the exercises that will follow the baseline assessment. Patients will be prescribed an individualized exercise program considering: (1) their exercise preferences, (2) their current physical capacity, (3) previous medical history, and (4) presence of underlying comorbidities, mobility, and skeletal fragility concerns \[NOTE: the location/impact of a tumour is not applicable for PROPELLER as it was in REB#5901, and is thus not included here\]. The participant will have an opportunity to execute the exercises in the remote presence of the RKin who will provide corrective feedback where applicable.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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Prehab

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Fluent in English for the purposes of providing informed consent, completing study-related questionnaires, and understanding intervention and other study requirements
* Have a minimum of 28 days prior to scheduled LDLT

Exclusion Criteria

* They plan to be absent for more than 2 weeks of the intervention period
* Their health status changes during the pre-LDLT procedure which results in the loss of LLD candidacy
Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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University Health Network, Toronto

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Daniel Santa Mina

Clinician Investigator

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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University Health Network

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Site Status

Countries

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Canada

Other Identifiers

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22-5022

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id