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This pilot, parallel-group randomized controlled trial will evaluate the feasibility, safety, usability, and preliminary efficacy of the Rise&Walk InHome (RWH), a novel robotic gait training device designed for home use after stroke. Twenty adults with lower-extremity motor impairment following a first-ever stroke (3 months to 5 years post-event) will be randomized 1:1 to either (1) RWH-assisted home walking plus usual care or (2) usual care alone for 12 weeks. Participants in the intervention group will receive an in-home RWH device, complete a structured device training program, and be instructed to perform 30-minute RWH walking sessions four times per week (48 sessions total). All participants will undergo standardized outcome assessments at baseline, weeks 4, 8, and 12, including the 6-Minute Walk Test (primary outcome), 10-Meter Walk Test, daily step count via wearable activity tracker, and health-related quality of life (SF-36). Additional feasibility and usability outcomes include device use and adherence, patient satisfaction and motivation, ease of use, perceived exertion, and adverse events. Findings will inform the feasibility of in-home deployment of the RWH device and provide preliminary effect-size estimates to guide the design of a larger efficacy trial.
Full description
This study is Aim 3 of a larger NIH-funded project to develop and evaluate the Rise&Walk InHome (RWH), a stationary robotic gait training device designed to deliver high-repetition, high-intensity stepping exercise in the home for individuals with walking limitations after stroke. Aims 1 and 2 focus on hardware and software usability optimization and device safety testing; Aim 3, described here, is a pilot clinical trial to assess feasibility, safety, usability, and preliminary clinical efficacy of the RWH compared with usual care.
Stroke survivors frequently face barriers to accessing clinic-based high-dose gait training, including transportation, cost, and limited availability of advanced rehabilitation technologies. High-intensity, task-specific gait training can improve walking speed, endurance, and function after stroke, yet these gains often fail to translate into increased real-world walking activity. Bringing robotic stepping into the home may improve access, enable higher cumulative training doses, and support more consistent engagement. The RWH is a transfer-accessible, body-weight-support gait trainer that transitions users from sit to stand and guides the legs through a stepping pattern while allowing adjustable body-weight offload, speed, and assistance. An integrated touchscreen interface and remote dashboard support parameter progression, safety monitoring, and adherence tracking.
This parallel-group, single-blind randomized controlled trial will enroll approximately 20 adults with a first-ever stroke and lower-extremity motor impairment who are 3 months to 5 years post-stroke and able to stand for at least 30 minutes with minimal assistance. After informed consent, eligibility screening, home evaluation, and technology competency training at the clinical site, participants will be randomized (1:1) to either the RWH intervention plus usual care or usual care alone. Randomization will occur only after participants (and, if needed, an assistant) successfully complete a structured RWH training and competency checklist and the home environment is deemed suitable for safe device installation.
Intervention group (RWH + usual care): Participants assigned to the intervention will receive an RWH device installed in their home by an engineer and physical therapist. Device settings (e.g., speed, body-weight support, assistance levels) will be individualized based on baseline assessments and in-clinic training. Participants will be instructed to perform 30-minute walking sessions on the RWH four times per week for 12 weeks (with up to 60 minutes per day allowed to accommodate warm-up, cool-down, and rest breaks). They will use the built-in Borg CR10 Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE) tool to target high-intensity gait training during work intervals, with lower-intensity periods for recovery. Device-recorded data (session duration, step count, assistance, body-weight support, and average RPE) will be transmitted to a secure, HIPAA-compliant dashboard. Weekly phone or virtual check-ins with the study team will review progress, adjust training parameters as needed, and monitor safety and technical issues.
Control group (usual care): Participants in the control arm will continue with standard outpatient or home-based rehabilitation services as recommended by their clinical providers, including any prescribed home exercise programs. The study team will not prescribe or alter usual care. Control participants will wear a study-provided activity tracker and complete simple weekly logs to document rehabilitation visits, duration, and types of activities, as well as adherence to prescribed home exercises. Periodic check-in calls will be used to clarify logs and monitor safety.
All participants (both groups) will receive a wearable step-tracking watch to measure daily step count during a 7-day baseline period and throughout the 12-week study. Outcome assessments will be completed at baseline and at approximately 4, 8, and 12 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint is change in walking endurance as measured by the 6-Minute Walk Test (6MWT). Secondary endpoints include walking speed (10-Meter Walk Test), daily step count, and health-related quality of life. Tertiary feasibility and usability endpoints include device adherence and total minutes of RWH use, patient satisfaction and motivation, perceived usability, session-level exertion, and qualitative feedback captured during weekly check-ins. Adverse events (AEs) and serious adverse events (SAEs) will be tracked throughout the 12-week period, classified using standard medical coding, and summarized descriptively.
The target sample size of approximately 20 participants (10 per arm) is based on feasibility considerations and will support estimation of recruitment and adherence rates, variability in key outcome measures, and preliminary between-group effect sizes. Although the trial is not powered to detect small between-group differences, it is designed to (1) determine whether in-home use of the RWH is feasible, safe, and acceptable for stroke survivors and their assistants; (2) generate preliminary effect-size estimates for changes in 6MWT, 10MWT, step counts, and quality-of-life measures; and (3) identify practical considerations for larger, multi-site efficacy trials and for future reimbursement and implementation efforts.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Karen Nolan, PhD; Julie Hartman, DPT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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