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The Effect of Exercise on Recent Onset Low Back Pain in the Emergency Department

Q

Queen's University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Low Back Pain

Treatments

Other: Advise regarding use of medications
Behavioral: Exercise
Behavioral: Advice to stay active and engaged in usual activities.
Behavioral: Advice on use of ice or heat

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03756519
REH-715-18

Details and patient eligibility

About

Low back pain (LBP) is the leading contributor to years lived with disability and an important contributor to healthcare costs and time off work. Exercise is effective for chronic low back pain, but there is a lack of evidence to inform whether exercise in the emergency department is effective for people with acute low back pain. This randomized controlled trial will evaluate the effectiveness of a brief exercise intervention provided in the emergency department for people with recent onset low back pain. People with acute low back pain (<1 week) will be randomly assigned to either usual care or to usual care plus a brief exercise intervention delivered by trained physiotherapy students. The study will evaluate the impact of the added exercises on self-reported disability (primary outcome), pain intensity, global rating of change, patient satisfaction, and adverse events. In addition, we will pilot data collection related to return to work, healthcare utilization, and cost effectiveness outcomes to determine the feasibility of conducting a future trial with additional patient participants required to evaluate these outcomes. Outcomes will be evaluated at baseline, 48-72 hours, 1-week, 1-month, and 3-months from their initial emergency department visit. The results of this study have the potential to inform emergency department management of acute low back pain.

Full description

Low back pain (LBP) is the leading contributor to years lived with disability and an important contributor to healthcare costs and time off work. Exercise is effective for chronic low back pain, but there is a lack of evidence to inform whether exercise in the emergency department is effective for people with acute (<1 week) low back pain.

The objectives of this randomized controlled trial are:

  1. To determine the effectiveness of an exercise intervention delivered in the ED in comparison to usual ED care on pain, function, global rating of change, patient satisfaction, and adverse effects in adults with recent onset LBP (< 1 week).
  2. To determine the feasibility of a future RCT to evaluate the effects of the ED exercise intervention on return to work outcomes, health care utilization, and cost-effectiveness in comparison to usual care.

The investigators hypothesize that an exercise intervention in the ED will improve pain, function, global rating of change, and patient satisfaction in comparison to usual ED care with no difference in adverse effects.

Design: A randomized controlled trial (RCT) with two parallel arms (exercise and usual care).

Blinding: The patient will be partially blinded by our not providing full details on the two exercise approaches being studied. The health care providers delivering the interventions will not be blinded due to the nature of the intervention. However, research assistants administering the outcome measures will be blinded. The outcomes assessed are objective measures assessed using an online survey tool that will be free of assessor bias.

Randomization and allocation concealment: Participants will be randomized in a 1:1 ratio to exercise or usual care groups by an independent statistician using a computerized random number generator. The random allocation will be placed in sequentially numbered opaque envelopes. The envelopes will be opened by the RA after completion of baseline assessment.

Patient enrollment: Consecutive patients with acute LBP who are seeking urgent care at Kingston General Hospital Emergency Department (ED) and Hotel Dieu Hospital Urgent Care Clinic (UCC) will be invited to participate over a 4-month period May 1 through August 31, 2018). ED based research staff will screen patients for willingness to be invited to participate when they arrive at the ED. These staff will then invite participation once the physician assessment is complete and eligibility criteria are reviewed.

Inclusion criteria: English speaking adults (18-65 years) with recent onset LBP (<1 week).

Exclusion criteria: people with subacute/chronic LBP, previous episode of back pain in the past 3 months, fracture, previous back surgery, red flags (e.g. urinary retention, bilateral or multilevel neurological impairment), traumatic mechanism of injury (fall >3m or 3 steps, MVC >100km/h).

Assessment and outcome measures: All measures will be collected using Qualtrics, a secure online database, at baseline, 48-72 hours, 1-week, 1-month, and 3-months.

Baseline factors used to describe the population: age, gender, duration of back pain (hours), whether there have been previous episodes of back pain, whether or not the participant has pain in other areas of the body, medications, comorbidities, work status prior to onset of back pain, and current work status.

Objective #1: Individual health outcomes will be collected using validated tools described under the outcomes assessed.

Objective #2: This study design will not have adequate power or long-term follow-ups required to adequately evaluate return to work, healthcare use, and cost-effectiveness. The investigators plan to pilot the use of these outcomes to determine the feasibility of conducting a future trial to evaluate these outcomes.

Analysis: For objective #1, Repeated-measure linear mixed models will be used to assess the effect of treatment (exercise versus usual care) on our primary (disability) and secondary (pain, global rating of change, patient satisfaction, adverse effects) outcomes at all time-points (48-72 hours, 1-week, 1- and 3-months). A difference of 2 on the NPRS36 and 3 points on the RMDQ37 will be considered clinically meaningful. For objective #2, all feasibility outcomes will be reported descriptively and analyzed qualitatively as recommended by methods and reporting guidelines for pilot and feasibility studies.

Sample size: The investigators searched one year of ED and UCC records to identify LBP patients eligible for this study. 2000 patients/year attended for back pain with > 500 during our four-month recruitment period. Of these, a chart review suggests 43% of these met our eligibility criteria. Based on past trials in these settings, we expect at least 50% will consent resulting in a sample size of 107+. This will achieve over 90% power to detect a minimally important difference of 3 points on the RMQ, using a two-sided α=0.05 and assuming a standard deviation of 6.2 points and accounting for a 10% loss to follow-up. This will also provide an adequate sample to assess the secondary feasibility objectives.

Enrollment

69 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • English speaking
  • Adults (18-65 years)
  • Recent onset low back pain (<1 week)

Exclusion criteria

  • Subacute/chronic LBP (> 1week)
  • Previous episode of low back pain in past 3 months
  • fracture
  • previous back surgery
  • urinary retention
  • saddle anaesthesia
  • bilateral or multilevel neurological impairment
  • traumatic mechanism of injury (fall >3m or 3 steps, MVC >100km/h).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

69 participants in 2 patient groups

Exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Participants in the exercise intervention arm will receive the usual care protocol plus a standardized, evidence informed exercise intervention provided by trained physiotherapy students. The exercise intervention will begin with a brief assessment to rule out contraindications to exercise and to identify any directional preferences (e.g. pain with lumbar flexion and relief with extension). The PT will then be taught four standardized exercises: the pelvic tilt exercise, a rotational exercise, a tailored graded walking program taking into account the current abilities of the patient, and an exercise based on the directional preference of the individual. These will be re-enforced with a handout including the rationale, instructions and dosage recommendations for the exercises.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Advice to stay active and engaged in usual activities.
Behavioral: Advice on use of ice or heat
Other: Advise regarding use of medications
Behavioral: Exercise
Usual care
Active Comparator group
Description:
Our usual care protocol was developed based on 30 responses to an 18 item survey of Queen's Department of Emergency Medicine physicians. Three themes emerged as interventions most commonly used. Each of these strategies has evidence for small, but positive treatment effects and low risk of harms: 1) advice to stay active and engaged in usual activities, 2) use of ice or heat to manage pain, and 3) recommendation for analgesia using NSAIDs if needed and appropriate.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Advice to stay active and engaged in usual activities.
Behavioral: Advice on use of ice or heat
Other: Advise regarding use of medications

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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