Make Every Step Count: Personalised Music Feedback to Walking for People Living With COPD
NCT ID: NCT06629675
Last Updated: 2025-04-16
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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RECRUITING
NA
30 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2025-04-20
2025-09-26
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Listening to music in daily life can decrease stress and improve the psychological well-being. Implementing music to enhance exercise performance has been utilised with different populations. Auditory feedback in the form of listening to music is one example where exercising to music can be utilised as distraction from fatigue perception or used as a motivational tool to exercise in a healthy population. Previous studies have investigated the effect of listening to music while exercising at different intensities and music tempos on fatigue perception and have shown a positive effect in decreasing the perception of fatigue. In addition, the effect of choosing the preferred versus non-preferred music genre on repeated sprints showed significant improvement in motivation to exercise and lower perceived exertion rates in the preferred music genre group. Similarly, in COPD, listening to music as distractive auditory stimuli while exercising decreases breathlessness and fatigue symptoms resulting in increased aerobic capacity and HRQOL. In another study, individuals with COPD who listened to music while performing high-intensity exercise, showed a reduction in dyspnoea, which was associated with higher tolerance of high-intensity exercise as measured by endurance time. The findings of a previous study showed that participants who listened to music can perform significantly more exercise compared to participants who listened to grey noise or silence. Paced walking to music with COPD participants showed significant improvement in dyspnoea, exercise tolerance, HRQoL and fatigue. In the context of unsupervised walking exercise among individuals living with COPD, paced walking to interval beeps sound as such in metronomes to maintain the walking exercise intensity had been investigated previously. In a prospective observational clinical trial, the effect of home-based PR on exercise capacity and HRQoL using paced walking to metronome was investigated. The results showed improvements in maximal exercise capacity (six minute walk test: 6MWT) and HRQoL (SGRQ). However, the constant rhythm such as in metronome style feedback may not be interesting overtime which can make walking exercises less engaging and lead to reduced motivation for long-term adherence.
Combining the effect of paced walking when listening to 'metronome style' feedback and preferred music to support walking exercise might offer a more enjoyable way to coach people living with COPD to walk for exercise at their prescribed intensity. This principle has been investigated in adult without reported diseases population using a mobile application (app), the BeatClearWalker (BCW), as shown in the link (https://youtu.be/MLy4GA8\_eUc?si=oQL3mklA2bRKbnQl). The BCW is a fitness smartphone application that monitors walking cadence and helps individuals to walk at their individually-prescribed cadence and maintain that cadence. The app is designed to work on smartphones run by Android software only. Despite a considerable number of fitness applications that monitor walking distance, this is the first application designed to support walking and provide real-time feedback about cadence through music sound quality. The application allows service users to listen to any music while walking and apply dynamic live audio feedback to help individuals to walk at and maintain the pre-set individualised target walking cadence which can be entered on the application. The real-time, hands-free audio feedback is noticeable and designed to disrupt the quality of the played music. The feedback comes in two forms: (1) clear music, similar when listening to any typical music played in streaming music player or (2) degradation of music audio quality. The music will play without effect if the individuals walk at or above their targeted cadence. Once the walking cadence drops below the targeted, the quality of the music will be degraded and will return to normal once the individual reaches the targeted cadence again.
Conditions
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Study Design
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NA
SINGLE_GROUP
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
NONE
Study Groups
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Music Walking Application BeatClearWalker (BCW)
As it is a single-arm feasibility study, all participants will be allocated to one arm, receiving routine personalised walking exercise while listening to music from the smartphone using the music walking application BeatClearWalker during their Pulmonary rehabilitation Programme.
Music walking application BeatClearWalker (BCW)
The music walking application (BCW) is a smartphone application that can monitor the walking pace and allow individuals to listen to music and give immediate feedback so they can correct their walking pace to match their target walking speed, as prescribed by the healthcare professional. The application provides real-time audio feedback in the form of music; the music sound quality will reduce whenever the walking speed drops below or exceeds the participant\'s target walking speed. Simply, the application will work to supervise service users while exercising walking. The investigators are trying to assess the feasibility of this application with service users during their Pulmonary Rehabilitation programme (at the hospital/ home) to find out how participants interact with listening to music while exercise walking and how well they're able to keep to their target speed.
Interventions
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Music walking application BeatClearWalker (BCW)
The music walking application (BCW) is a smartphone application that can monitor the walking pace and allow individuals to listen to music and give immediate feedback so they can correct their walking pace to match their target walking speed, as prescribed by the healthcare professional. The application provides real-time audio feedback in the form of music; the music sound quality will reduce whenever the walking speed drops below or exceeds the participant\'s target walking speed. Simply, the application will work to supervise service users while exercising walking. The investigators are trying to assess the feasibility of this application with service users during their Pulmonary Rehabilitation programme (at the hospital/ home) to find out how participants interact with listening to music while exercise walking and how well they're able to keep to their target speed.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* The patient is referred for PR at the UHL.
* The patient has a confirmed diagnosis of COPD using spirometry (based on GOLD criteria)
* Male or female, aged 18+ years.
* Able to communicate in written and spoken English.
Exclusion Criteria
* Lack of motivation to participate in PR programme.
* Any-contra-indications absolute or relative to exercise training.
* Has had a cardiac event within last 6 weeks
* Severe psychiatric disorders
* Patients with a history of MRSA +ve screens (patients can be assessed and given an exercise programme but cannot attend the classes. Patients need to have 3 consecutive -ve MRSA swabs before they can attend).
* Unable to understand written or spoken English.
18 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Strathclyde
OTHER
University Hospitals, Leicester
OTHER
University of Leicester
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Mark Orme, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Leicester
Linzy Houchen-Wolloff, PhD
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre - Respiratory, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Sally J Singh, PhD
Role: STUDY_CHAIR
NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre - Respiratory, University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust
Locations
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NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre - Respiratory
Leicester, Leicestershire, United Kingdom
University Hospitals of Leicester (UHL)
Leicester, Leicestershire, United Kingdom
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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0976
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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