Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02737839

Adaptation of the STEPPING ON Fall Prevention Program for Older Adults Receiving Cancer Therapy

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
101 (actual)
Sponsor
Washington University School of Medicine · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Chronic disease self-management is the ability of the individual, in conjunction with family, community and healthcare professionals to manage symptoms, treatments, lifestyle changes and psychosocial, cultural and spiritual consequences associated with a chronic condition. Self-management strategies have been successfully used in supportive care and survivorship in oncology. Stepping On, a multi-component program using a small-group learning environment, reduces falls by 31%. It empowers participants with knowledge about fall-risk, exercise, medications and environmental hazards to self-manage their risk of falls over 7 weeks of educational sessions, followed by a home visit. The research in this proposal will yield the adaptation of the effective group-education-based fall-prevention intervention Stepping On, tailored to cancer patients, feasible for testing in a multi-institutional trial, and ultimately scalable in the oncology setting.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERStepping On Education Program
OTHERHome visit
OTHERPatient Questionnaire-Includes questions about demographics, activity level, performance status, falls, medication, comorbidities, hearing, vision, pain, and neuropathy
OTHERMini-Balance Evaluation Systems Test* The Mini-BESTest includes 14-items that assess balance across four domains: 1) anticipatory postural adjustments, 2) reactive postural responses, 3) sensory orientation, and 4) stability in gait. Each item is rated on a 0-2 scale with 0 indicating poor balance and 2 indicating no impairment. The total possible score on the Mini-BESTest is 28 points * Balance testing will take approximately 15 minutes.
OTHERGAITRite* Gait will be assessed using the 4.87-m GAITRite * The GAITRite is a computerized mat that allows for measurement of spatiotemporal measures (e.g., gait velocity, stride length) of gait. We will measure gait in the following conditions: 1) comfortable forward, 2) fast-as-possible, and 3) dual-task. For comfortable forward, participants will be asked to walk at their self-perceived normal pace. For fast-as-possible, participants will be asked to walk as quickly and safely as possible. For dual-task, participants will be asked to walk at their comfortable pace forward while saying as many words that begin with a letter given to them just prior to the start of the trial. Participants will complete five trials of each condition. Gait testing will take approximately 15 minutes.
OTHERPrecise measure of movement testingWe will conduct additional movement-based testing with participants wearing small, portable sensors (APDM, Inc., Portland, OR). These sensors allow for precise measurement of movement characteristics. The sensors will be worn on the outside of clothing and will be placed on the following body locations: 1) sternum, 2) low back, 3) right wrist, 4) left wrist, 5) right ankle, and 6) left ankle. The participants will wear these sensors during the following movement tasks: 1) Two Minute Walk Test, 2) Timed Up \& Go, 3) Dual Timed Up \& Go, 4) Stand and Walk (SAW), and 5) 360 Degree Turn test. These sensors will allow for capture of precise measures postural sway, arm swing, gait variability, and many other variables the proposed movement tasks.

Timeline

Start date
2016-06-09
Primary completion
2020-01-14
Completion
2020-01-14
First posted
2016-04-14
Last updated
2020-10-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02737839. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.