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About
The goal of this randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to analyze whether the effectiveness of a synchronous telerehabilitation program is better than a face-to-face physical therapy program in improving the physical fitness, functional status, and quality of life in frail male and female volunteers aged 60 years or older living in the community and haven frailty according to the modified Fried phenotype scale. The main research questions are: 1) Is a synchronous telerehabilitation program effective in improving the physical fitness, functional status and quality of life of frail older people?; 2) Is a synchronous telerehabilitation program more effective in improving the physical fitness, functional status and quality of life, compared to face-to-face physical therapy program, in frail older adults? In synchronous telerehabilitation program group, a healthcare professional will supervise up to four or five participants remotely exercising at home during each session, using a real-time videoconferencing app. Participants will be able to see and talk to both the health professional and the other participants. The exercise program will consist of 1-hour sessions carried out twice a week for 12 weeks. In the face-to-face physical therapy group, the exercise sessions will take place in a older person care center, which will also last 1 hour twice a week for 12 weeks. Regardless of the group, exercise sessions will include a mixture of cardiovascular, balance, strength, flexibility, and gait exercises.
Full description
Background A promising solution to solve the barriers to practice physical activity in frailty older adults (OAs) is the incorporation of a synchronous telerehabilitation program. Mobile technologies are emerging tools that have the potential to facilitate health care, reduce distance barriers, time, and cost, that limits accessibility to face-to-face physical therapy program, facilitates access to opportunities and reduces healthcare gaps. Nevertheless, there is little evidence of its effectiveness as a therapeutic strategy and more rigorous studies are suggested. To date, a few studies in Chile have used mobile apps to support the treatment of OAs regarding physical fitness and functional status and there are no studies that have analyzed the effects of synchronous telerehabilitation in OAs.
General objective To analyze whether the effectiveness of a synchronous telerehabilitation program is better than a face-to-face physical therapy program in improving the physical fitness and functional status, and quality of life in frail older adults.
Methodology A blinded, parallel group, randomized controlled trial (RCT), Adults ≥60 years old from Los Ángeles, Chile, will be recruited. The inclusion criteria will be: (i) both sexes aged ≥60 years, (ii) community-dwelling older adults, (iii) Older adults having frailty according to the modified Fried phenotype scale (ref), (iv) ability to stand up and walk ≥10 meters without assistance technique, (v) Abbreviated Mini Mental State (MMSE) >13 points, (vi) without medical contraindication for physical exercise. Exclusion criteria includes those older adults presenting fractures and recent acute myocardial infarction, associated cardiovascular pathology, severe acute respiratory failure, high blood pressure, uncontrolled diabetes mellitus, limitations following instructions as well as people participating in other exercise program during the project. The sample size was calculated a priori using G*Power 3.1.9.7., the total of subjects required is 52. (26 in each group) considering α=0.05, 1-β=0.8 and effect size (ES)=0.8. Having in consideration the possibility of abandonment, 6 subjects were added (total n=58; n=29 in each group). Participants who meet the participation criteria will be randomized using a computer-generated sequence and concealed allocation to one of the following two groups:(1) STR Group who performed synchronous telerehabilitation, or (2) the FPT Group who performed face-to-face physical therapy.
Procedures:
Physical fitness, functional status, and quality of life will be assessed face-to-face 1 week prior to initiating the intervention in both groups.
Additionally, at that time, STR group participants will be provided with a tablet and home exercise equipment (exercise mats, resistance bands, cones, and dumbbells). If exercise materials are lost or damaged, they will be replaced. A home visit will be made to identify barriers to exercise and determine the right place to carry out the synchronous telerehabilitation sessions. Written and verbal instructions will be given outlining the simple steps necessary to connect to an online meeting and facilitating participation in the synchronous telerehabilitation program as well as on the proper use of the home exercise equipment. At the beginning of the interventions, all participants will be given a hydration kit (cotton towel and a water bottle) a smartwatch (Fitbit® Inspire 2, by Google, California, USA) to measure continuous heart rate monitoring during exercise sessions to maintain exercise intensity, and pedometer (OMRON® HJ-321, Kyoto, Japan) to record the number of daily steps each participant takes.
The home exercise equipment and technological equipment (tablet, pedometer, and smartwatch) will be delivered to the participants through the signing of a loan agreement and will be returned to the responsible researcher once the data collection is finished. If the technological equipment presents a factory defect during the execution of the study, the 12-month manufacturer's guarantee will be used. During the intervention period, nutrition guidance and exercise education will be provided to all participants once every 4 weeks. Throughout the 12-week intervention period, the participants will be encouraged to maintain the same physical activity levels and calorie intake as before participating in the study. During educational sessions, the investigators will ask participants to report to session staff any changes in their physical activity levels or nutritional intake during the intervention period. A postintervention assessment will be performed after the last week of the 12-week program. All data collection will be carried out in a face-to-face meeting with older adults at a care center. Technical stuff will be trained, which will guarantee an unbiassed procedure. Measurements will be obtained individually, in a place with optimal conditions of privacy, temperature and humidity. Evaluations will be acquired by healthcare professionals; the person evaluating will be different to the one performing the interventions.
Interventions:
Synchronous telerehabilitation program (STR group) During the exercise session, the participants turns on the tablet PC, watches the instructor perform the exercise, and follows the instructor's movements. For the instructor to observe the correct movements of the participants, the resistance and balance exercises are performed in the frontal and sagittal planes. During each session, a technical stuff will supervise up to four or five participants exercising remotely at home, using a real-time videoconferencing app (Zoom®, CA, USA). The videoconference session will be projected on a television screen located in an older adult's care center. Once the technical stuff has been assigned participants, their supervision will not be interchangeable. Participants will be able to see and talk to both, the healthcare professional and other participants. The older adults, from their homes, will complete 1-hour sessions, twice a week for 12 weeks.
Face-to-face physical therapy program (FPT Group) The exercise sessions will take place in a senior center for OAs, lasting 40-60 min, twice a week for 12 weeks; and will include a mixture of cardiovascular, balance, strength, flexibility, and gait exercises.
Regardless of the group, each session will consist of a warm-up activity (5-10 min), main exercise activity (30-40 min), and cool-down activity (5-10 min) following the guidelines of a multicomponent exercise program. Exercise intensity will be controlled based on the Rating of Perceived Exertion (RPE) on the Borg scale, and heart rate measured with a smartwatch before, during and, after each exercise session according to the guidelines of the American College of Sports Medicine (ACSM), as explained below. The warm-up and cool-down activities will include stretching and walking in place (9≤RPE≤10 and 40<55% maximum Heart rate (HRmax)), while the main exercise activity will consist of strength, resistance exercise, cardiovascular exercises and balance exercises (to avoid falls) performed using dumbbells, color-coded resistance bands (Thera-Band; Hygenic Corp.) and a chair (11<RPE≤15 and 55<70 HRmax).
To ensure safety and compliance, exercise training will be supervised by a health professional (physical therapy) who has been appropriately trained (research support stuff). This health professional will provide one-on-one instructions to each participant, according to the target RPE and HRmax (measured with a smartwatch) for each session. All participants will interact with the same health professional.
Specifically in each session, the resistance exercise will be carried out through squats, dumbbells or sitting on the chair using color band (as an example of the exercise progression: yellow (Level 1) band during Weeks 1-4, red (Level 2) band during Weeks 5-8, and green (Level 3) band during Weeks 9-12). This routine, will focus on the main muscle groups in the shoulders, arms, thighs, hips, and calves, included three or four sets with 8-15 repetitions per set. The balance exercise will include two-legged standing, tandem standing, single-legged standing, semi-tandem standing, tandem walking, turning in a circle around the chair, and exercises such as standing on toes, which will focus on postural muscle groups. Cardiovascular exercise will consist of walking at a pace that participants can maintain a continuous conversation at, but that requires some effort. The walk time may increase as the sessions go by (8-15 minutes). The total exercise time was progressively increased from 40-60 minutes over the course of the intervention period. Previous Concurso de Proyectos de Iniciación en Investigación 2024 international studies that analyze synchronous telerehabilitation programs, have used similar exercise protocols.
In the event of an adverse event involving a participant in the FTP group, the AOC 1.1 protocol "Alert system and organization in the event of an emergency" will be used. The participant is assisted and accompanied until the arrival of the emergency medical care service (SAMU). At the same time, other research support personnel will phone a family member. Follow up will then be done.
In the case of a STR group participant, who presents an adverse event, an immediate telephone call will be made to the emergency service and to a registered family member. In addition, communication with the affected user will be always maintained, until the arrival of a family member and/or emergency service. After the event occurs, follow-up will be carried out.
Outcome measures Physical fitness, functional status and quality of life will be examined before and after the interventions. All measurements will be performed by a health professional (technical stuff will be trained) blinded to the group allocation scheme, which will guarantee an unbiassed procedure. Additionally, all measurements will be carried out in a face-to-face meeting and obtained individually, in a place with optimal conditions of privacy, temperature and humidity (a care center to older adults that collaborates with the project). The main outcome for this trial will be lower body strength (evaluated in the 30 second chair stand test) and cardiorespiratory fitness (evaluated using the 2-minutes step test). Secondary outcomes included upper limb strength, dynamic balance, static balance, number of daily steps, functional status, and quality of life.
Physical fitness:
Functional status:
It will be measured by using the Functional Independence Measure (FIM). It is composed of 18 items, with a total score ranging from 18 to 126, and it allows quantifying the demand for help from third parties that a person needs to perform their daily life activities. The evaluated items include activities of self-care, sphincter control, locomotion, mobility/transfer, and social cognition. For each evaluated activity, the score ranges from 1 - totally dependent, to 7 - totally independent. The FIM is one of the most widely used instruments to carry out functional evaluation in rehabilitation, validated for the elderly, presents clinical validity, agreement between evaluators, test-retest and intra-observer reliability and has been widely used in Chile.
Quality of life:
The Short Form-36 Health Survey in its Spanish version will be used to assess quality of life. The Short Form-36 Health Survey is a self-report instrument that contains 36 questions from 8 dimensions related to people's health: physical function, physical role, bodily pain, vitality, social function, emotional role, mental health, and general health. The score obtained corresponds to values on a scale of 0 to 100. A higher score reflects a better quality of life.
The sociodemographic background of the older adults will be recorded as age, gender (male/female) and geographical origin (rural or urban), educational level (basic <8 years, middle 8-12 years, or higher education >12 years), presence of comorbidities (diabetes mellitus, arterial hypertension, dyslipidemia). Nutritional status will be classified based on the body mass index (BMI). Weight (kg) and height (m) will be combined to report BMI in kg/m^2. Cut-off points will be considered (low weight: <22.9 kg/m2; normal weight: 23.0-27.9 kg/m2; overweight: 28.0-31.9 kg/m2; and obesity: ≥32.0 kg/m2). The questions and the classification indicated in the National Health Survey 2016-2017, will be used.
Statistical analysis Data will be analyzed using SPSS software (version 26 for Windows, IBM, New York, USA). Missing data will be handled by intention-to-treat analysis (multiple imputation method). The description will be made as measures of central tendency and dispersion (continuous variables) and as percentages (categorical variables). Using the Shapiro-Wilk test, the normality of the data will be verified, and a two-step approach for transforming will be applied to the non-normal variables. Homoscedasticity will be analyzed using Levene's test. A 2-way repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) will be used to determine the effects of interventions. The effects of the model are the group (GE; GC), the times (Pretest; Posttest) and their interaction over time (Time x Group). The Bonferroni post hoc test will be applied to identify statistically significant comparisons. The TE will be determined using Cohen's d (<0.2 insignificant; ≥0.2 and ≤0.49 small; ≥0.5 and ≤0.79 moderate; ≥0.8 large). All analyzes will be performed with SPSS v.25 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) considering p<0.05 and GraphPad Prism v8.
Expected results It is expected that a synchronous telerehabilitation program and a face-to-face physical therapy program improve the main outcome (lower body strength cardiorespiratory fitness) and secondary outcomes (upper limb strength, dynamic balance, static balance, number of steps, functional status, and quality of life) of frail older people. Besides, it is expected that a synchronous telerehabilitation program compared to a face-to-face physical therapy program has equal or greater improvement in the main outcome (lower body strength cardiorespiratory fitness) and secondary outcomes (upper limb strength, dynamic balance, static balance, number of steps, functional status and quality of life) of frail older people. The synchronous telerehabilitation can be a simple, low-cost, and fun alternative to traditional exercise programs to promote active ageing.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
(i) both sexes aged ≥60 years, (ii) community-dwelling older adults, (iii) older adults having frailty according to the modified Fried phenotype scale, (iv) ability to stand up and walk ≥10 meters without assistance technique, (v) Abbreviated Mini Mental State (MMSE) >13 points, (vi) no medical contraindication for physical exercise. In addition, older adults must have a smartphone or tablet, and Internet connection at home. Computer or Internet literacy is not required as an eligibility criterion.
Exclusion Criteria: Those older adults presenting fractures and recent acute myocardial infarction, associated cardiovascular pathology, severe acute respiratory failure, high blood pressure, uncontrolled diabetes mellitus, limitations following instructions, as well as people participating in other exercise program during the project.
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58 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Marina Alvarado, PhD; Igor Cigarroa, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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