Trials / Recruiting
RecruitingNCT05970562
Project 4: Ambulatory Biofeedback and Voice Therapy for Patients With Vocal Hyperfunction
Preliminary Studies to Test the Effects of Ambulatory Biofeedback in Small Groups of Patients With Vocal Hyperfunction: Study 3
- Status
- Recruiting
- Phase
- EARLY_Phase 1
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 100 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Massachusetts General Hospital · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years – 65 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
Vocal hyperfunction (VH) is the most commonly treated class of voice disorders by speech-language pathologists and voice therapy is the primary curative treatment. Patients and clinicians report that generalizing improved voicing into daily life is the most significant barrier to successful therapy. We will test if extending biofeedback into the patient's daily life using ambulatory voice monitoring will significantly improve generalization during therapy and if individual patient factors, like how easily they can modify their voice and engagement during therapy, moderate the effects of the biofeedback.
Detailed description
Vocal hyperfunction (VH) is ostensibly caused by and/or associated with pathological daily voice use and involves the most commonly treated voice disorders by speech-language pathologists, e.g., vocal fold nodules, muscle tension dysphonia. Voice therapy is the primary curative option for VH. For example, even when patients undergo laryngeal surgery to remove lesions, they are still thought to be at risk for recurrence unless they successfully complete post-surgical voice therapy. However, voice therapy suffers from high rates of patient dropout. Patients and clinicians report that generalizing desired vocal behaviors from the therapy session into daily life is one of the most significant barriers to successful voice therapy. Despite this critical barrier, voice therapy remains entirely dependent upon episodic delivery within an in-clinic or virtual session. Thus, this project will test if adding Ambulatory Voice Monitoring with Biofeedback (AVM-B) significantly addresses this generalization challenge, as it can directly extend therapeutic activities into the patient's daily life. A clinical trial will randomize patients with VH to receive an evidence-based therapy (Conversation Training Therapy; CTT) or CTT with AVM-B added. In Aim 1, it is hypothesized that, compared to patients who only received CTT, patients who receive CTT and AVM-B will demonstrate significantly better generalization during therapy which will be retained immediately after therapy and six months later. In Aim 2, we will explore patient factors that mediate the relationship between therapy and generalization, hypothesizing that stimulabilty-how easily a patient can modify their voice-and engagement-the patient's level of effort during therapy-will be positively correlated to the amount of generalization in daily life. If successful, this work would result in multiple paradigm-shifting impacts with potential to improve the efficiency of clinical practice. AVM-B would become one of the first evidence-based voice treatment activities taking place primarily outside the therapy session. Future work could investigate how AVM-B could transition voice therapy from once-a-week sessions into a continuous process integrated into the patient's daily life. Further inquiry could improve generalization by identifying evidence-based methods to tailor therapy based on individual patient factors such as stimulability and engagement. After discharge, AVM-B could provide a means for patients to "recalibrate" themselves and prevent relapse without having to see a clinician. Finally, implementation work could help clinicians adopt/adapt AVM-B and evaluate its effects on dropouts.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DEVICE | Ambulatory Voice Monitoring with Biofeedback (AVM-B) | AVM-B is software on the Voice Health Monitor that uses a neck-placed accelerometer to sense neck skin vibrations during voicing in daily life. The AVM-B consists of cues every time the patient exceeds a subject-specific threshold, \[100% frequency AVM-B\] and/or summary statistics every 2 minutes of voicing \[Summary AVM-B\]. |
| BEHAVIORAL | Conversation Training Therapy | CTT is a 4-week (1 45-minute session per week) evidence-based voice therapy for patients with VH, developed primarily to maximize the amount and speed of generalization outside the therapy session. It consists of 3 required targets: Decreased overall auditory-perceptual voice severity, improved discrimination between baseline and improved voicing, and adherence to CTT recommendations in daily life. The three optional targets are decreased overall auditory-perceptual severity across an increased pitch range, loudness range, and decreased rate of speech. All voice-related targets are modified through practicing voicing with increased forward resonance and mean airflow in spontaneous speech/conversation. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2024-03-01
- Primary completion
- 2028-09-01
- Completion
- 2029-04-01
- First posted
- 2023-08-01
- Last updated
- 2025-05-11
Locations
2 sites across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05970562. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.