Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Background: It is estimated that 14% of the Swedish population have knee osteoarthritis. Common osteoarthritis symptoms are pain, stiffness and impaired physical function. To evaluate muscle strength in the lower extremities could indicate if there is a risk for a patient with osteoarthritis to worsen their disease. Increased muscle strength could improve physical function and pain for this patient group. A reliable self-test to evaluate physical function could help patients with diagnosed or suspected knee osteoarthritis to seek healthcare in time. The 30 seconds chair stand test (30 CST) is part of a test battery which is recommended to use for patients with osteoarthritis, both in research and in a clinical setting. It is a valid and a reliable measurement for patients with osteoarthritis. However, reliability studies of the 30 CST as a self-test is lacking.
Objective: To determine whether 30 CST is a reliable self-test to evaluate physical function among patients with knee osteoarthritis, we want to explore how much it differs in the test results when the patient is performing the test by herself and also compare it with when it is conducted in a clinical setting.
Methods: 147 participants with knee osteoarthritis will be recruited from three rehabilitations centers in primary care. The participant will perform the self-test twice at home, and the self-test will be compared with when the test is guided by a physical therapist at a rehabilitation center. The reliability results will be presented with an intraclass correlation coefficient and standard error measurement.
Estimated results: It is expected that the results from this study will clarify if 30 CST can be used as a self-test for persons with suspected or diagnosed/confirmed knee osteoarthritis. If this performance test show enough reliability to be used as a self-test, it could be used as an indicator if the patient should seek healthcare or not due to impaired function. To seek healthcare in an earlier phase usually require less efforts and often leads to shorter healthcare process. These improvements of the healthcare process could be of value to manage the expected future increase of osteoarthritis consultations to primary care.
Full description
The project leader will be visiting recruiting units to inform and educate about the study protocol and data collection procedure.
Patient recruitment
Patients with knee osteoarthritis will be recruited from three rehabilitations centers in region Västra Götaland, Sweden. When eligible participants have been identified according to inclusion criteria, the participants will get written information about the study, including informed consent, manual to the 30 CST self-test, and questionnaires.
Data Collection
30 CST: The 30 CST will be performed on an approximately 45 cm high chair without armrest (if possible). The participant will be asked to perform as many stands as possible during 30 seconds. Start position is sitting on the chair, and the arms should be crossed over the chest during the whole test. The stands must be to upright standing position (i.e. fully extended hips and knees), and back to sitting position. The patients pain intensity will be measured with numeric rating scale before and during the test.
Manual to the 30 CST self-test and questionnaires: The participants will get a description of how the self-test should be performed. The self-test should be performed twice with approximately two days apart, and the last measurement should be approximately one week before the planned physical therapist testing with the 30 CST. The self-test results will be sealed in an envelope together with the completed questionnaires (demographic data, Intermittent and Constant Osteoarthritis Pain (ICOAP), Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS-PS)). The patients will be bringing these data to their physical therapists till their next visit at the rehabilitation center.
Physical therapist testing: All physical therapists in the study will get an education about the study protocol and the 30 CST. The physical therapists will be blind of the self-test result during the testing. They will use the same manual for the 30 CST as the patients. Participants will be notified how well their 30 CST test results are compared to the normal population. The participants' length and weight will be measured by the physical therapist to calculate the body mass index.
Reporting for adverse events
If the patients or physical therapists have to cancel the test, they will be able to report the reason why they needed to cancel (e.g. increased pain, unsafe due to difficulties with patients balance).
Data management
All data will be coded and managed according to the General Data Protection Regulation. All data will be confidential and only authorized will have access to the patient registry. No individual information can be identified since the results will be presented at group level. Data will be saved for at least 10 years to enable audit.
Sample size
Sample size was calculated with statistical software program PASS 16. A sample size of 117 participants with two observations per participant for inter respectively intra rater reliability achieved a power of 80% to detect an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) of 0.8 with a significance level of 0.05. With an estimated 20% drop-out rate, 147 participants are planned to be recruited to the study.
Statistical analysis
Demographic data will be analyzed descriptively. It will be presented as number and percent, mean and standard deviation, and median and 25th to 75th percentiles. Relative reliability (inter and intra reliability) will be presented with an ICC using a 95% confidence interval. ICC-values > 0.8 indicate enough reliability and values > 0.9 represent optimal reliability. Absolute reliability will be presented with standard error measurement. The analyses will be made in SPSS with a significance level of p<0.05.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
129 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Chan-Mei Ho, PhD-student
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal