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Behavioural Change Techniques for Physical Activity and Exercise Adherence Among People With Parkinson's (PDActive)

U

University College Cork (UCC)

Status

Active, not recruiting

Conditions

Parkinson Disease

Treatments

Behavioral: Parkinson's Exercise and Education Programme and Behavioural Change
Behavioral: Parkinson's Exercise and Education Programme

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Many people with Parkinson's (PwP) experience many barriers to reaching the recommended dosage of exercise. The aim of this study is to examine the feasibility of behavioural change support techniques delivered alongside an exercise programme to improve physical activity, function, to inform a future pilot randomised controlled trial.

Twenty participants with Parkinson's will be allocated to the intervention (n=10) or the control group (n=10). Both groups will receive usual care, which includes a weekly program of a multidisciplinary education, a supervised exercise class and a prescribed home exercise program. The intervention group will receive additional behavioural change techniques to help them adhere to the exercises, targeting behaviour regulation, belief about capabilities and social influences.

Outcomes will measure how well people were able to stay in the programme, and their physical function after the 12 week programme. Surveys will be used to compare experiences and satisfaction between groups. Exit interviews will be completed with the intervention group only, exploring their experience of the behavioural change techniques.

Discussion: The results will help inform a future pilot randomised controlled trial, based on the intervention acceptability, consent rate, maintenance, and protocol integrity.

Full description

Background: Parkinson's is a common progressive neurological condition characterized by motor and non-motor deficits. Physical activity and exercise can improve health, but many people with Parkinson's (PwP) have trouble reaching the recommended dosage. Our recent literature review found improvements in exercise adherence with behavioural change interventions, but it remains unclear which are most effective. Further qualitative research and patient and public involvement has informed a novel behavioural change support intervention to be tested alongside an existing exercise program.

Objective: To examine the feasibility of behavioural change support techniques delivered alongside an exercise programme to improve physical activity, function, and self-efficacy in PwP (and study procedures) to inform a future pilot RCT trial.

Methods: A parallel-arm single blinded randomised feasibility study. Twenty participants with Parkinson's (Hoehn and Yahr stage 1-3) will be recruited from a physiotherapy primary-care waiting list. Following written consent, and baseline assessment, the participants will be randomly allocated to the intervention (n=10) or the control group (n=10). Both groups will receive usual care, which includes a weekly program of a multidisciplinary education, a supervised exercise class and a prescribed home exercise program. The intervention group will receive additional behavioural change techniques, targeting behaviour regulation, belief about capabilities and social influences. Class and home exercise adherence, behavioural component uptake and adherence, and negative events will be recorded. Outcomes will include enrolment and maintenance rates, physical function, falls, physical activity, and exercise self-efficacy measured pre- and post- the 12- week program (in-person). Surveys will be used to compare experiences and satisfaction between groups. Exit interviews will be completed with the intervention group only, exploring their experience of the behavioural change techniques.

Discussion: The results will help inform a future pilot RCT, based on the intervention acceptability, consent rate, maintenance, and protocol integrity.

Enrollment

20 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's Disease (Early Stages of Parkinson's H&Y Stage 1-3)
  • Ability to drive or obtain transport that will drop and collect at the health centre.
  • Ability to independently walk (with or without a walking aid)
  • Reported by the referring healthcare provider or carer as able to follow instructions and carry out the exercise program independently at home.

Exclusion criteria

  • • A diagnosis of atypical Parkinson's (e.g., progressive supranuclear palsy, multiple system atrophy, etc) or vascular Parkinsonism or drug-induced parkinsonism

    • Previously completed the PEEP program.
    • Had a hospital admission < 6 weeks ago.
    • Immobility, or are a wheelchair-user.
    • Severe visual or auditory impairment
    • Serious medical conditions in major organs (heart, lung, or kidney) or other illnesses which prevent independent ambulation or safe exercise.
    • Been identified as a high falls risk (identified during the pre-screening using objective measure the Short Physical Performance Battery (a score of ≤6 indicates a higher fall risk in old adults27) and subjective reporting of frequent falls in the past six months.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

20 participants in 2 patient groups

Parkinson's Education and Exercise Programme [PEEP]
Active Comparator group
Description:
12 week programme of exercises and educational sessions
Treatment:
Behavioral: Parkinson's Exercise and Education Programme
Parkinson's Education and Exercise Programme and Behavioural Change [PEEP-BC]
Experimental group
Description:
12 week programme of exercise and education with additional behavioural change techniques to promote exercise adherence and exercise self-efficacy.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Parkinson's Exercise and Education Programme and Behavioural Change

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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