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PD-Ballet: Effectiveness and Implementation in Parkinson's Disease

K

King's College Hospital NHS Trust

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Parkinson Disease

Treatments

Other: Dance with ballet elements

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Current literature consistently demonstrates beneficial motor effects of dance-based therapies in Parkinson's disease, along with improved quality of life. Little is known about the non-motor gains following such therapy. To date, no RTC has been conducted to investigate the benefits of ballet dancing in Parkinson's disease.

The investigators aim to recruit 160 people with Parkinson's to either: participate in a 12-week ballet-based dancing intervention followed by a 'social Tea and Biscuit' session, or 12-week usual treatment monitoring and 'social Tea and Biscuit' sessions taking place after each intervention session. This study employs a randomised, controlled, single-blind, hybrid type 2 design with a hybrid implementation protocol to investigate both clinical efficacy of the programme and implementation aspects. The project's primary outcome measure is centered around non-motor symptoms of PD. Other measures include motor assessments, wearable sensors and quality of life assessments.

Due to COVID-19 pandemic, the delivery of the sessions will be a hybrid model - virtual sessions will be the primary method, with some capacity for in-person delivery when possible and deemed safe.

Full description

Parkinson's Disease is a neurodegenerative condition currently affecting over 120,000 people in the UK and this number is set to double by 2065. The current treatment is based around symptomatic pharmacotherapy with levodopa being the gold standard. Currently there is some evidence for non-pharmacological treatments outlined by NICE guidelines, with no recommendations to specific adjuvant non-pharmacotherapies to aid PD symptoms, other than referral for physiotherapy. However, physical exercise has been shown to improve balance, strength, coordination and gait, leading to a significant improvement in quality of life.

While a clear benefit of physical exercise on the motor symptoms is evident, few studies to date focused on the effects of group classes and on non-motor effects. Dance is emerging as a therapeutic option with cognitive, functional and psychosocial benefits, due to it being a multi-dimensional activity offering auditory, visual and sensory stimulation, musical experience, social interaction, memory, motor learning and emotional perception, expression and interaction and as such stimulating multiple pathways. To date, no research has explored acute and chronic effects of exercise based interventions (such as dance therapy with ballet) in comparison to the conventional therapy-based management of Parkinson's.

This is a randomised, controlled, single-blind study involving 160 PwP across all stages of the disease. Participants will be allocated to either standard therapy plus 12 weekly sessions of ballet-based dancing followed by 'Tea and Biscuit' session or standard therapy with 'Tea and Biscuit' session on a 2:1 ratio. Non-motor symptoms, motor symptoms and quality of life will be measured using validated scales, questionnaires and wearable sensor recordings (Parkinson's KinetiGraph, GaitSmart). Furthermore, electrophysiological measures will be performed to determine the effects on cortical activity in a subgroup of participants. Assessments will be performed by a blinded rater at baseline and at the end of the intervention. The project will also explore the possibility of implementation of such therapy into the current pathways.

Due to COVID-19 pandemic, the delivery of the sessions will be a hybrid model - virtual sessions will be the primary method, with some capacity for in-person delivery when possible and deemed safe.

Enrollment

160 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 100 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Effectiveness investigation eligibility criteria (PwPs only)

  1. Inclusion:

    • Age of 18 and upwards
    • diagnosis of idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD) according to the UK PD Brain Bank criteria
    • Hoehn Yarhr stages I-V
  2. Exclusion:

    • diagnosis or suspicion of other causes for parkinsonism
    • advanced-stage therapy consideration (deep brain stimulation, continuous levodopa duodenal infusion, and continuous subcutaneous apomorphine infusion)
    • any condition interfering with the ability to give the informed consent
    • Indication of dementia through a score of ≤21 on MoCA
    • enrolment in a simultaneous investigational trial
    • inability to travel to the weekly sessions

Implementation science investigation eligibility criteria f) Inclusion:

  • People with Parkinson's - patients with a formal diagnosis of PD who have participated in the PD-Ballet intervention.

  • Family members of PwP - relatives/carers/nominated person of the patients with a formal diagnosis of PD who have participated in the PD-Ballet intervention

  • Clinicians (Referrers) - neurologists/geriatricians/neuropsychiatrists/SALT/OT, as well as PD specialist nurses, physicians and research staff experienced in PD

  • Dance leaders (Deliverers) - English National Ballet dancers involved in the PD-Ballet project

  • Support staff (Supporters)- other parties involved with the PD-Ballet project

    g) Exclusion:

  • People with Parkinson's - parkinsonism other than PD, lack of involvement in the PD-Ballet project

  • Clinicians - Neurologists/geriatricians/neuropsychiatrists/SALT/OT, as well as PD specialist nurses, physicians and research staff experienced in PD

  • Dance leaders - English National Ballet dancers not involved in the PD-Ballet project

  • Support staff - other parties not involved with the PD-Ballet project

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

160 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: Dance with ballet elements
Usual Treatment
No Intervention group
Description:
usual treatment with the addition of joining 'Tea and Biscuit' sessions remotely

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Aleksandra Podlewska, MSc

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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