Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05527262

Intensive Upper Limb Training in Chronic Stroke

Is Intensive Upper Limb Rehabilitation Effective in Chronic Stroke Patients? A Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 2
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
105 (actual)
Sponsor
University College, London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The evidence supporting routine provision of high-dose, high-intensity upper limb neurorehabilitation treatment for stroke survivors beyond the first few months after stroke is limited. The Queen Square Upper Limb (QSUL) programme provides 90 hours of upper limb neurorehabilitation over 3-weeks to chronic stroke survivors. The recently published service evaluation demonstrated encouragingly large, clinically meaningful effects at the level of activity and body function. An alternative way to deliver high doses of effective therapy is through technological developments, e.g. immersive interactive gaming environments such as the MindPod Dolphin programme. The intention of this study is to provide stronger level evidence for intensive upper limb rehabilitation by conducting a randomised controlled trial of two different types of upper limb training compared to usual care. Patients considered suitable for the QSUL programme will be randomised to either: Group 1- intensive upper limb rehabilitation programme (QSUL); Group 2- MindPod programme; Group 3-wait-list control (who will be offered the treatment after the waiting list is complete). The first aim of the study is to compare the effect of each type of high-dose, high-intensity upper limb training to usual care using measures of upper limb impairment and activity levels 3 months after treatment is complete. The secondary aims are to comply with recent recommended by the Stroke Recovery and Rehabilitation Roundtable, and (i) investigate the effects of upper limb neurorehabilitation on kinematics of upper limb movement (using a KINARM exoskeleton), and (ii) use neuroimaging (MRI and EEG) and neurophysiological (TMS) measures to determine the characteristics of stroke survivors who are most likely to benefit from this treatment approach. The results from this work will (i) help determine the impact of two methods of high dose, high intensity upper limb training in chronic stroke patients; (ii) identify whether there are any predictors of treatment response that will help stratify patients in future clinical trials of upper limb neurorehabilitation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALQueen Square Upper Limb Neurorehabilitation ProgrammeA timetable will be implemented including a minimum of 45 hours of active time on task over 3 weeks 5-days a week (first and last day will involve the assessment procedures) (timetabled, 90-hours). Our unpublished in-service audits suggest that this equates to 45-60 hours of active upper limb training. The remainder of the time is spent on rest (in-session, between-session), cardiovascular fitness, and education (promoting self-efficacy). The programme is staffed with a 1:1 staff/patient ratio (4 physiotherapists, 4 occupational therapists, 4 rehabilitation assistants for 12 patients at any one time). Participants in this trial will receive two daily sessions each of physiotherapy and occupational therapy, supplemented with tailored, individualised interventions delivered by rehabilitation assistants either singly or in groups.
DEVICEImmersive gaming therapyThe treatment group will receive a minimum of 45 hours of active time on task over 3 weeks, 5 days a week (first and last day will involve the assessment procedures) to complete arm, hand and finger training (overseen by a physiotherapist). Patients will engage with MindPod Dolphin (shoulder/elbow) and other interfaces (hand/fingers) in a customised immersive game-based platform set.

Timeline

Start date
2022-07-04
Primary completion
2025-12-31
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2022-09-02
Last updated
2026-01-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05527262. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.