| Literature DB >> 27853668 |
Christian Fisahn1, Mirko Aach2, Oliver Jansen2, Marc Moisi3, Angeli Mayadev4, Krystle T Pagarigan5, Joseph R Dettori5, Thomas A Schildhauer2.
Abstract
Study Design Systematic review. Clinical Questions (1) When used as an assistive device, do wearable exoskeletons improve lower extremity function or gait compared with knee-ankle-foot orthoses (KAFOs) in patients with complete or incomplete spinal cord injury? (2) When used as a rehabilitation device, do wearable exoskeletons improve lower extremity function or gait compared with other rehabilitation strategies in patients with complete or incomplete spinal cord injury? (3) When used as an assistive or rehabilitation device, are wearable exoskeletons safe compared with KAFO for assistance or other rehabilitation strategies for rehabilitation in patients with complete or incomplete spinal cord injury? Methods PubMed, Cochrane, and Embase databases and reference lists of key articles were searched from database inception to May 2, 2016, to identify studies evaluating the effectiveness of wearable exoskeletons used as assistive or rehabilitative devices in patients with incomplete or complete spinal cord injury. Results No comparison studies were found evaluating exoskeletons as an assistive device. Nine comparison studies (11 publications) evaluated the use of exoskeletons as a rehabilitative device. The 10-meter walk test velocity and Spinal Cord Independence Measure scores showed no difference in change from baseline among patients undergoing exoskeleton training compared with various comparator therapies. The remaining primary outcome measures of 6-minute walk test distance and Walking Index for Spinal Cord Injury I and II and Functional Independence Measure-Locomotor scores showed mixed results, with some studies indicating no difference in change from baseline between exoskeleton training and comparator therapies, some indicating benefit of exoskeleton over comparator therapies, and some indicating benefit of comparator therapies over exoskeleton. Conclusion There is no data to compare locomotion assistance with exoskeleton versus conventional KAFOs. There is no consistent benefit from rehabilitation using an exoskeleton versus a variety of conventional methods in patients with chronic spinal cord injury. Trials comparing later-generation exoskeletons are needed.Entities:
Keywords: exoskeleton; rehabilitation; robotics; spinal cord injury
Year: 2016 PMID: 27853668 PMCID: PMC5110426 DOI: 10.1055/s-0036-1593805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Spine J ISSN: 2192-5682
Fig. 1Flow diagram showing results of literature search. Abbreviation: KQ, key question.
Spinal cord injury studies characteristics table
| First author (year), study design | Patient characteristics | Study purpose | Inclusion and exclusion criteria | Intervention (A) | Comparator (B) | Length of F/U; % F/U ( | Risk of bias | Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alcobendas-Maestro (2012), | No. randomized | To compare a walking re-education program using exoskeleton to conventional OGT among individuals with iSCI of both traumatic and nontraumatic etiology | Inclusion: C2–T12 SCI; ASIA C or D; traumatic or nontraumatic, nonprogressive lesions; onset <6 mo; age 16–70 y; achieved assisted standing for minimum of 1 wk previously | Standard physical treatment + robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Standard physical treatment + OGT (60 min) | 8 wks of F/U; 93.8% (75/80) | Low | Grant from Fondo para la Investigación Sanitaria en Castilla la Mancha- AN/2006/27 |
| Benito-Penalva (2012), | No. randomized | To report the clinical improvements in patients with spinal cord injury associated with intensive gait training using electromechanical systems according to patient characteristics | Inclusion: motor incomplete (ASIA C or D), and select motor complete SCI (ASIA A or B) when voluntary movement was present at segments L2 and L3; 18+ y of age; able to tolerate the standing position without orthostasis | Conventional therapy + robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Gait trainer GT 1 + conventional therapies | 8 wks of F/U; 80.8% (105/130) | Moderately high | NR |
| Duffell (2015), | No. randomized | To investigate the effects of locomotor treadmill training and tizanidine on gait impairment in people with incomplete motor SCI, and to understand whether functional levels affect recovery with different interventions | Inclusion: age 18–50 y, motor incomplete SCI (ASIA C or D); level of injury above T10; >12 mo postinjury; able to ambulate; medical clearance; spasticity in the ankle (Modified Ashworth Score ≥1); lower-limb PROM within limits for ambulation | Robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | B: no training | 4 wk; A versus B F/U: 95.4% (54/56), A versus C F/U: 98.1% (53/54) | Moderately high | Supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation awards to M.M.M. |
| Esclarín-Ruz (2014), | No. randomized | To compare a walking re-education program with robotic locomotor training plus OGT to conventional OGT in individuals with incomplete UMN or LMN injuries having either traumatic or nontraumatic nonprogressive etiology | Inclusion: C2–T11 SCI ASIA C or D; with only UMN findings; T12–L3 SCI ASIA C or D with only LMN; traumatic and nontraumatic, nonprogressive lesions; onset < 6 mo; age 16–70 y; achieved assisted standing a minimum of 1 wk previously | Standard physical treatment (30 min) + OGT + robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Conventional OGT (30 min) + standard physical treatment (30 min) | 8 wk of F/U (no training): | Low | Supported by the Founding for Research of Castilla La Mancha (grant no. PI 2006-45) |
| Field-Fote (2011), | No. randomized | The objective of this study was to compare changes in walking speed and distance associated with 4 locomotor training approaches | Inclusion: chronic (≥1 y) SCI; ASIA C or D at or above T10; ability to take at least 1 step with 1 leg; ability to rise to a standing position with moderate assistance (50% effort) from 1 other person | A: robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | B: treadmill-based training with manual assistance (60 min) | 4 wk of training, 6 mo F/U; 86% (64/74) | Moderately high | Funding provided by National Institutes of Health grant R01HD41487 (to Dr. Field-Fote) and The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis |
| Gorman (2016), | No. randomized | To assess the effectiveness of robotically assisted BWSTT for improving cardiovascular fitness in chronic motor iSCI | Inclusion: traumatic SCI ≥ 1 y prior to enrollment, age 18–80 y, injury between C4–L2, AISA C or D, able stand at least 30 min | Robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Home stretching program (20–25 min) | 3 or 6 mo | Moderately high | Funded by Department of Veterans Affairs Rehabilitation R&D Service Merit Review Award B4027I; study registered at clinicaltrials.gov with the identifier number NCT00385918 |
| Hornby (2005), | No. randomized | To study the effects of robotic-assisted BWSTT on individuals with subacute SCI | Inclusion: traumatic or ischemic SCI above T10; injury within 14–180 d; ASIA B, C, or D; required physical assistance from at least one PT to ambulate over ground | A: robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | B: Therapist-assisted BWSTT (30 min) | 8 wk training and F/U; 85.7% (30/35) | Moderately high | NR |
| Huang (2015), | No. randomized | To compare the effects of BWSTT and robot-assisted rehabilitation on bowel function in patients with spinal cord injury with respect to defecation time and defecation drug dose (enema) | Inclusion: NR | Robot-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | BWSTT + manual therapy + standard rehabilitation training (20 min) | 4 wk; % F/U NR | Moderately high | Research on Design Theory and Compliant Control for Underactuated Lower-Extremity Rehabilitation Robotic Systems, Code 51175368 |
| Labruyère (2014), | No. randomized | To compare changes in a broad spectrum of walking-related outcome measures and pain between robot-assisted gait training and strength training in patients with chronic iSCI, who needed walking assistance | Inclusion: age 18–70 y, chronic iSCI > 1 y; sensorimotor incomplete ASIA C or D; motor level of the lesion C4–T11; walk with at most moderate assistance; cognitive capacity to follow verbal instructions | Robot-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Strength training (45 min) | 4 wks of each intervention for a total of 8 wk of training, F/U to 6 mo; 100% (20/20) | Moderately low | International Spinal Research Trust (Clinical Initiative Stage 2, London, UK; grant number CLI06), the Henry Smith Charity (London, UK), and the EMDO Foundation (Zurich, Switzerland) |
| Niu (2014), | No. randomized | To characterize the distinct recovery patterns of gait impairment for SCI subjects receiving exoskeleton training, and to identify significant predictors for these patterns | Inclusion: NR | Robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | No interventions | 4 wk; F/U NR | Moderately high | National Institutes of Health (R01HD059895]) and the Craig H. Neilsen Foundation awarded to M.M.M. |
| Shin (2014), | No. randomized | To determine the effect of robotic-assisted gait training compared with OGT | Inclusion: nonprogressive traumatic or nontraumatic SCI, onset <6 mo, ASIA D, age 20–65 y | Regular PT (60 min) + robotic-assisted locomotor training via exoskeleton | Conventional OGT + regular PT (60 min) | 4 wks; 88.3% (53/60) | Moderately high | NR |
Abbreviations: ASIA, American Spinal Injury Association; BMD, bone mineral density; BWSTT, body weight-supported treadmill training; CHF, congestive heart failure; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; F/U, follow-up; iSCI, incomplete spinal cord injury; LL, lower limb; LMN, lower motor neuron; NR, not reported; OGT, overground training; PAD, peripheral artery disease; PT, physical therapy; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ROM, range of motion; SCI, spinal cord injury; SD, standard deviation; UMN, upper motor neuron.
Unless otherwise noted, training duration is the same for intervention and comparator.
Lokomat (Hocoma, Switzerland).
Three months of follow-up for the robotic group, 6 months of follow-up for control group; the control group crossed over to exoskeleton training after 3 months of home stretching.
Data only for those with data at final analysis.
MBZ-CPM1 (ManBuZhe [TianJin] Rehabilitation Equipment Co. Ltd., PR China).
Differences between groups for primary outcomes at various follow-up periodsa
| First author (year), F/U, and groups | 10MWT (m/s) | 6MWT (m) | WISCI II (0–20 [best]) | FIM-L (2–14 [best]) | SCIM (0–100 [best]) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alcobendas-Maestro (2012), | Median (IQR) at 8 wk | Median (IQR) at 8 wk | Median (IQR) at 8 wk | Median (IQR) at 8 wk | NR |
| Benito-Penalva (2012), | Mean Δ from baseline | NR | Mean Δ from baseline | NR | NR |
| Duffell (2015), | % attained MID | % attained MID | NR | NR | NR |
| Esclarín-Ruz (2014), | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean Δ from baseline | NR |
| Field-Fote (2011), | Mean Δ from baseline | NR | NR | NR | NR |
| Hornby (2005), | No significant differences | No significant differences | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean Δ from baseline | NR |
| Labruyère (2014), | Mean Δ from baseline | NR | Mean Δ from baseline | NR | Mean Δ from baseline |
| Niu (2014), | Mean Δ from baseline, class I | Diff between groups' rate of change over 4 wk (m/wk) | NR | NR | NR |
| Shin (2014), | NR | NR | Median (IQR) at 4 wk | NR | Median (IQR) at 4 wk |
Abbreviations: 6MWT, 6-minute walk test; 10MWT, 10-meter walk test; BWSTT, body weight-supported treadmill training; CI, confidence interval; CT, conventional training; diff, difference; FIM-L, Functional Independence Measure–Leg; F/U, follow-up; IQR, interquartile range; LMN, lower motor neuron; MID, minimally important difference; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; OGT, overground training; PT, physical therapy; SCIM, Spinal Cord Independence Measure; SD, standard deviation; TT, treadmill training; UMN, upper motor neuron; WISCI II, Walking Index for Spinal Cord Injury II.
Unless otherwise indicated, all values are reported as mean ± SD.
FIM-L evaluated for only walking and stair tasks.
The MID was defined using control group data; this was calculated using the following formula: (1.96 × √2 × standard error of the mean). Participants who achieved a change from baseline equal to or greater than the MID for that test, after 4 weeks of training, were classified as “MID achieved.”
Esclarín-Ruz et al (2014)11 is a subgroup analysis of Alcobendas-Maestro et al (2012).8
Authors reported WISCI scores (1–20 [best]).
These values were estimated from Fig. 4.
The 95% CIs were estimated from Fig. 4, point estimates were calculated using values in Table 2.
Niu et al (2014)16 is a subgroup analysis of Duffell et al (2015).10
Class I (“low walking capacity class”) included subjects with longer 10MWT and Timed-Up-and-Go (TUG) test times, and shorter 6MWT distances at baseline; class II (“high walking capacity class”) included subjects with shorter 10MWT and TUG test times and longer 6MWT distances.
Values on 10MWT were estimated from Fig. 1.
Differences between groups for secondary outcomes at various follow-up periodsa
| First author (year), follow-up, and groups | Score at follow-up | Difference between treatments |
|---|---|---|
| LEMS 0–50 (best) | ||
| Alcobendas-Maestro (2012), | Median (IQR) at 8 wk | |
| Benito-Penalva (2012), | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean diff (95% CI), A versus B: −2.2 (−2.6, −1.7) |
| Esclarín-Ruz (2014), | UMN, mean Δ from baseline | UMN, mean diff (95% CI), A versus B: 3.05(−1.06, 7.16) |
| Field-Fote (2011), | Mean Δ from baseline, left leg | Mean diff (95% CI), left leg |
| Gorman (2016), | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean diff (95% CI), A versus B: 0.7 (−5.05, 6.45) |
| Hornby (2005), | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean diff at last F/U (95% CI) |
| Labruyère (2014), | Mean Δ from baseline | Mean diff (95% CI), |
| Shin (2014), | Median (IQR) at 4 wk | |
| Bowel function | ||
| Huang (2015), | Defecation time (min), mean Δ from baseline | Mean diff (95% CI): −14 (−21.4, −6.6) |
Abbreviations: BWSTT, body weight-supported treadmill training; CI, confidence interval; CT, conventional training; diff, difference; F/U, follow-up; IQR, interquartile range; LEMS, lower extremity motor score; LMN, lower motor neuron; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; OGT, overground training; PT, physical therapy; TT, treadmill training; UMN, upper motor neuron; SD, standard deviation.
Unless otherwise indicated, all values are reported as mean ± SD.
Esclarín-Ruz et al (2014)11 is a subgroup analysis of Alcobendas-Maestro et al (2012).8
Right leg lower extremity motor score data also reported, not statistically different from left leg lower extremity motor score data.
It is unclear if authors evaluated the control group after the initial control treatment (12 weeks) or if they were evaluated after crossing over to robotically assisted body weight-supported treadmill training (24 weeks).
These values were estimated from Fig. 4.
The 95% CIs were estimated from Fig. 4, point estimates were calculated using values in Table 2.
Quality of evidence evaluating exoskeletons as assistive or rehabilitative devices in incomplete or complete SCI
| Outcome | Follow-up | Studies ( | Serious risk of bias | Serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness | Serious imprecision | Conclusions | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Key question 1: exoskeletons as assistive devices | ||||||||
| No comparisons available | No data | |||||||
| Key question 2: exoskeletons as rehabilitative devices | ||||||||
| Exoskeleton versus nonexoskeleton rehabilitation strategies | ||||||||
| 10MWT | 8 to 12 wk | 5 RCTs | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups except for 1 high risk of bias crossover study that reported strength training improved speed more than exoskeleton | Low |
| 6MWT | 8 wk | 2 RCTs | No | Yes (−1) | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| WISCI/WISCI II | 4 to 8 wk | 5 RCTs | Yes (−1) | Yes (−1) | No | Yes (−1) | Mixed results; a majority of included studies (3/5) found no statistically significant mean difference in scores between exoskeleton and non-exoskeleton rehabilitation; two studies found that median scores were significantly improved in exoskeleton groups | Very low |
| FIM-L | 8 wk | 2 RCTs | No | Yes (−1) | No | Yes (−1) | Mixed results; one study found no significant difference in mean FIM-L scores between exoskeleton and non-exoskeleton rehabilitation groups, and the other study found that median FIM-L scores were significantly improved in the exoskeleton group | Low |
| SCIM | 4 wk | 2 RCTs | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| Exoskeleton versus tizanidine | ||||||||
| 10MWT, Fast velocity | 4 wk | 1 RCT | Yes (−1) | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| 6MWT | 4 wk | 1 RCT | Yes (−1) | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| Exoskeleton versus no training | ||||||||
| 10MWT, Fast velocity | 4 wk | 1 RCT | Yes (−1) | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| 6MWT | 4 wk | 1 RCT | Yes (−1) | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | No significant difference between groups | Low |
| Key question 3: safety of exoskeletons as assistive or rehabilitative devices | ||||||||
| Exoskeletons as rehabilitative devices | ||||||||
| Skin irritation or abrasion | 3 and 6 mo | 1 RCT | Yes (−1) | Unknown | No | Yes (−1) | Skin irritation or abrasion associated with exoskeleton use was rare | Low |
| No adverse events | 8 wk | 2 RCTs | Yes (−1) | No | No | Yes (−1) | No additional adverse events occurred in the two studies that mentioned adverse events explicitly | Low |
| Exoskeletons as assistive devices | ||||||||
| No comparisons available | No data | |||||||
Abbreviations: 6MWT, 6-minute walk test; 10MWT, 10-meter walk test; FIM-L, Functional independence measure- leg; LMN, Lower motor neuron; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCIM, Spinal Cord Independence Measure; UMN, upper motor neuron; WISCI, Walking Index for Spinal Cord Injury.
Note: Baseline quality rated as follows: high = majority of articles are RCTs; low = majority of articles are observational; upgrade: large magnitude of effect (one or two levels), dose–response gradient (one level), plausible confounding decrease magnitude of effect (one level); downgrade: risk of bias (one or two levels), inconsistency of results (one or two levels), indirectness of evidence (one or two levels), imprecision of effect estimates (one or two levels).
Rehabilitation strategies included overground training with physical therapy, gait training with the GT1 end-effect device with conventional training, treadmill training with manual assistance, treadmill training with stimulation, overground training with stimulation, overground training alone, therapist-assisted bodyweight supported treadmill training, and strength training.
High walking capacity defined by high 10MWT velocity and Timed-Up-and-Go (TUG) test times, and high 6MWT distance at baseline. Low walking capacity defined by low 10MWT velocity and TUG test times, and low 6MWT distance at baseline.
Control and purpose of exoskeletons used with patients with spinal cord injuries
| Exoskeleton | No. of case series | No. of patients | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Joystick control | |||
| Rex-Bionics (Rex-Bionics, Auckland, New Zealand) | None | 0 | Assistive mobility device |
| Lokomat (Hocoma, Switzerland) | 8 | 159 | Rehabilitation |
| WPAL (Fujita Health University, Japan) | 2 | 11 | Assistive mobility device |
| Kinesis (Technaid, Madrid, Spain) | 1 | 3 | Rehabilitation |
| Posture control | |||
| Re-Walk (Argo Medical Technologies Ltd, Yokneam IIit, Israel) | 7 | 66 | Assistive mobility device |
| Ekso-Bionics (Eksobionics Ltd, Richmond, California, USA) | 2 | 10 | Rehabilitation |
| Indego (Parker Hannifin Corp., Macedonia, Ohio, USA) | 2 | 21 | Assistive mobility device |
| EMG control | |||
| HAL (Cyberdyne, Tsukuba, Japan) | 5 | 30 | Rehabilitation |
Abbreviations: EMG, electromyographic; HAL, Hybrid Assistive Limb; WPAL, Wearable Power-Assist Locomotor.