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Multicenter Schroth Exercise Trial for Scoliosis (MultiSETS)

U

University of Alberta

Status

Completed

Conditions

Scoliosis

Treatments

Other: The Schroth exercises treatment
Other: Global Postural Re-Education

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01610908
Pro00043397

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary aim of this multicenter randomized controlled trial is to compare the effect of a 6 month "Schroth exercise program combined with standard-of-care" to "standard-of-care alone" on scoliosis curve severity measured using the Cobb angle.

Secondary aims include:

  1. To determine the effect of Schroth exercises at 6 months on secondary outcomes including quality-of-life, spinal appearance, objective posture and spinal muscle endurance measurements.
  2. To determine the efficacy of 6 months of Schroth therapy offered to control participants after completing 6 months in the standard-of care group (using subjects as their own controls)
  3. To determine if the effects of the 6 months supervised Schroth exercise program can be maintained after supervised therapy is terminated.

At Hopital Ste-Justine, the following secondary aims will be pursued to examine the preliminary evidence about the effect of Global Postural Re-education (to satisfy the local ethics committee request because Global Postural Re-education exercises were offered routinely to patients at that institution prior to the trial).

A. To compare the effect and to quantify the treatment effect sizes of 6 months of "Global Postural Re-education exercises with North American standard Care consisting of only observation and bracing" to "Schroth exercises combined with North American standard care" and to "North American standard care alone" on scoliosis curve severity measured using the Cobb angle.

B. To estimate the effect and quantify the treatment effect sizes of 6 months of "Global Postural Re-education exercises with North American standard Care" to "Schroth exercises combined with North American standard care" and to "North American standard care alone" on outcomes including quality-of-life, perceived spinal appearance, objective posture and spinal muscle endurance measurements.

C. To determine if the effects of "Global Postural Re-education exercises with North American standard Care" can be maintained after discontinuing supervision.

D. To estimate the feasibility of conducting a randomized trial focused on Global Postural Re-education exercises by quantifying enrollment rates, attendance at scheduled exercise sessions and compliance with the home exercises prescribed.

Full description

Multicenter Schroth Exercise Trial for Scoliosis (SETS study) Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS) is a progressive 3D deformity of the spine. It is the most common orthopedic condition in adolescents. Of those with curves larger than 10°, 90% are females. Scoliosis often results in chronic pain, poor posture, function, and self-image.

Curves greater than 30° are braced or later surgically corrected. In Europe but not the Americas, small curves (<30°) are treated with exercises to prevent the need for bracing and moderate curves with bracing and exercises to prevent surgery. Bracing is uncomfortable and patients fear surgery. In contrast, exercises are generally well received.

Schroth exercises are the most studied scoliosis exercises and have achieved very good outcomes. Schroth was the first exercise approach to offer formal certification training. No randomized controlled trial has focused on the Schroth method. Only 1 randomized controlled trial and only 3 prospective controlled studies with important methodological flaws were included in a recent review of the effect of all types of scoliosis exercises that found that exercises slowed the worsening of scoliosis. A randomized controlled trial on Schroth exercises is needed.

Schroth exercises are asymmetric scoliosis-specific postural exercises and aim to improve the curve, posture, pain, function, and self-image. Schroth exercises target endurance and strength training of the abdominal, back, and leg muscles. Schroth exercises also aim to improve motor control of the posture by repeating corrective movements with progressively less feedback.

Objectives: (1) To compare the effect of 6 month "of Schroth exercises combined with standard-of-care" to "standard-of-care alone" on scoliosis curve severity measured using the Cobb angle.

Secondary aims include determining treatment effects on quality-of-life, spinal appearance, posture and spinal muscle endurance and monitoring if effect are maintained at long-term follow-ups.

See above for objectives corresponding to the secondary analysis planned at Hopital Ste-Justine.

Methodology:

Participants: Two hundred fifty-eight females with AIS will be recruited for this study from our scoliosis clinic. Females 10-16 years old with curves 10° to 45°, and Risser less than or equal to 3 will be included. Patients who are planning surgery, have had surgery, worn a brace or to be discharged will be excluded.

Procedures: Participants will be randomized to the standard-of-care group (observation of bracing if Boston brace criteria are met) or the Schroth exercise treatment group.

(At hospital Ste-Justine, only because of the ethics committee requested we include a third trial arm, we will randomize an equal number of subjects to each of the three trial arms (Global Postural Re-education, Schroth and Standard care) using the a variable blocked randomization specific to this site. This implies recruiting an estimated additional 52 patients to be randomized to the Global Postural Re-education group.) Outcomes will be measured by evaluators blind to randomization status at baseline and at 3 and 6 month follow-ups. The primary outcome is the spinal curvature angle on radiograph at 6 months. Secondary outcomes analyzed at 3, and 6 months include radiographs (Cobb angle, rotation), Scoliosis Research Society-22r quality-of-life domain scores (self-image, function, pain), spinal appearance questionnaire domain scores, postural measures (surface topography), and Sørensen back muscle endurance. Radiographs and Scoliosis Research Society-22 measures from routine scoliosis clinic visits will also be obtained from the clinic database until discharged from routine care. Measurement properties of all measures are adequate.

Standard-of-care subjects will be under observation or treated with bracing if they meet the Scoliosis Research Society bracing criteria for 6 months and then be offered the Schroth exercise treatment as a recruitment incentive necessary based on our pilot. Treated patients will receive supervised and standardized Schroth exercises combined with a home program in addition to standard of care for 6 months. Parents will be involved to enhance (and monitor) compliance. (At hôpital Ste-Justine only, one group will receive the 6-month supervised Global Postural Re-education intervention consisting of individual training sessions with a therapist combined with a home exercise program consisting of 1 or 2 exercises to perform twice weekly in addition the standard of care).

Analyses: Linear mixed models will be used to assess differences in group changes from baseline, to 3 months and 6-month, and adjusting for relevant covariates (including age, and risk of progression).

Expected findings: Schroth exercises will improve curve characteristics, quality of life, posture, pain, and muscular endurance in patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. The study team is integrated within the Edmonton scoliosis clinic, Montréal's Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Ste-Justine clinic and Calgary's Alberta Children Hospital Clinic. Research results can directly influence practice.

Enrollment

158 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

10 to 16 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • adolescent idiopathic scoliosis
  • Females
  • 10° to 45° according to Cobb (scoliosis curve)
  • with or without a brace
  • ability to travel weekly to our lab
  • skeletal maturity measured by Risser (0-3)

Exclusion criteria

  • other type of scoliosis
  • patients with curves > 50°
  • surgical candidates
  • patients who have had a corrective spinal surgery
  • out-of town candidates, without possibility to travel to our lab

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

158 participants in 3 patient groups

Schroth exercises
Experimental group
Description:
The experimental group receives the Schroth exercises treatment.Patients in this arm receive 5 individual sessions with a Schroth therapist for introduction to the approach. They they receive a home program consisting of 3-4 exercises to do at home everyday for 30-45 minutes. They come to weekly group therapy sessions to where exercise prescription is adjusted.
Treatment:
Other: The Schroth exercises treatment
Standard of care
No Intervention group
Description:
"The Standard of care" is a control group that will continue receiving the standard North American treatment prescribed by a surgeon (observation or brace \[if meeting SRS criteria\]) for of 6 months. After 6 months, the participants will receive the Schroth exercises intervention for 6 months.
Global Postural Re-education (Montréal)
Active Comparator group
Description:
The active group (in Montréal only) receives the Global Postural Re-Education exercises treatment.Patients in this arm come to weekly individual 1 hour long therapy sessions where exercise prescription is adjusted. Selection of posture exercises is based on scoliosis type, on muscular chain stiffness associated with posture alterations and on position increasing scoliosis or pain (lying, sitting, standing). They they receive a 15-min home program consisting of 1 to 2 exercises to do at home everyday.
Treatment:
Other: Global Postural Re-Education

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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