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Efficacy of a Criteria Based Clinical Pathway for Rehabilitation of Shoulder Injuries (CRISP)

N

Naval Medical Center

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Shoulder Pain
Shoulder Injuries

Treatments

Other: CRISP: Criteria-Based Approach for the Rehabilitation for Non-Operative Shoulder Injuries
Other: Standard of Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT06536114
NMCSD.0024.0048

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the current standard of care for rehabilitation of non-operative shoulder injuries to a novel, criteria-based approach (CRISP). Additionally, this study will identify factors which contribute to return to duty readiness. The main questions it aims to answer are:

  • Are there differences in patient reported outcomes between participants who undergo the criteria-based rehabilitation program versus the standard of care for shoulder injuries?
  • Are there differences in clinical measures (strength, etc.) between participants who undergo the criteria-based rehabilitation program versus the standard of care for shoulder injuries?
  • Are there clinical or rehabilitation factors, or participant characteristics, that contribute to return to duty readiness?

Participants will be randomized to either complete their rehabilitation per the standard of care with a physical therapist in a Military Treatment Facility or complete the CRISP program with a research physical therapist. Participants will:

  • Attend physical therapy for a non-operative shoulder injury
  • Attend initial and final clinical assessments at the clinic
  • Complete patient reported outcomes at 1-, 3-, 6- and 12-month timepoints

Full description

Without a data-driven pathway to assess and rehabilitate shoulder injuries, clinicians may be using time rather than criteria to guide rehabilitation and clearance for return to duty. Delayed return to duty and subsequent injury or surgery contribute to time lost from duty, negative financial implications for the Military Health System, and adversely affect Service members' mental health and quality of life. Therefore, we propose a study determining the optimal treatment progression to reduce unnecessary variability in management of non-operative of shoulder injuries for Service members through a phased, criteria-based clinical pathway: Criteria-based Rehabilitation for Injured Shoulders Paradigm (CRISP). Additionally, this study will identify factors which contribute to return to duty readiness.

To demonstrate the benefits of the CRISP program, we will determine the differences in physical, psychological, and quality of life patient-reported questionnaires, and clinical assessments of shoulder strength and function between the novel criteria-based rehabilitation program and the current standard of care for Service members with non-operative shoulder injuries within the Military Health System. To accomplish this, we will conduct a multi-site, single-blinded, randomized controlled trial in active duty Service members seeking care for a non-operative shoulder injury referred to physical therapy. We will recruit 250 Service members from the Naval Medical Forces (Pacific Region) and Brooke Army Medical Center/Center for the Intrepid. Participating Service members will complete clinical assessments and questionnaires at initial and final assessments; additionally, a link will be sent to participants to fill out questionnaires virtually at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-month time intervals. The CRISP group will undergo physical therapy treatment, directed by a research physical therapist, including both supervised physical therapy and a guided home exercise program. This approach has three phases: stabilization, for joint protection; strength and endurance, for functional capacity; and power, to prepare the Service member for returning to previous level of duty. The standard of care group will serve as the control arm and complete a period of physical rehabilitation under the supervision of a Military Health System physical therapist without study-specific guidance or interventions. To our knowledge, this is the first study to compare a criteria-based exercise intervention approach to the usual standard of care for the conservative treatment of shoulder injuries as well as identifying factors which contribute to RTD readiness.

Without using a data-driven pathway to assess and rehabilitate shoulder injuries, Service members may experience a potential delay in returning to their previous military occupational specialty or deployability, and residual impairments may persist. In turn, this could lead to a higher incidence of re-injury or referral to surgical intervention. In the near-term, the findings from this study will enhance individual patient care within the MHS, accelerating return to duty for our Service members and with fewer physical limitations. We also anticipate our findings will help identify the predictors of shoulder function and return to duty readiness. This study's findings will directly influence patient care by elucidating which treatment paradigm optimizes shoulder function in Service members, ultimately leading to improvements in quality of life for Service members, reducing time lost from injuries, as well as maximizing Service members' readiness, unit cohesion, and mission accomplishment.

Enrollment

250 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Active-duty Service members over the age of 18 who are seeking medical attention for shoulder pain or injury will be recruited to participate in this study.

Exclusion criteria

  • The exclusion criteria include individuals who have sustained cervical or thoracic spine injury in the past year; an upper extremity or spine injury within the past year and have not been cleared to perform their previous duty requirements; a diagnosis of adhesive capsulitis; individuals referred to post-operative rehabilitation for the shoulder; individuals who are scheduled for shoulder surgery within the following 12 weeks; pain originating from a body region other than shoulder or is non-orthopaedic in nature; individuals who have sustained an upper extremity limb loss; individuals pending a medical evaluation board, discharge from the military, or pending litigation for an injury.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

250 participants in 2 patient groups

Criteria-based Rehabilitation for Injured Shoulders Paradigm (CRISP).
Experimental group
Description:
The CRISP group will undergo physical therapy treatment, directed by a research physical therapist, including both supervised physical therapy and a guided home exercise program.
Treatment:
Other: CRISP: Criteria-Based Approach for the Rehabilitation for Non-Operative Shoulder Injuries
Standard of Care
Active Comparator group
Description:
The standard of care group will serve as the control arm and complete a period of physical rehabilitation under the supervision of a Military Health System physical therapist without study-specific guidance or interventions.
Treatment:
Other: Standard of Care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Marisunta Pontillo, PhD; Sara Gorczynski

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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