| Literature DB >> 31071100 |
Taweewat Wiangkham1,2,3,4, Joan Duda2, M Sayeed Haque5, Jonathan Price6, Alison Rushton1,2.
Abstract
Whiplash-associated disorder (WAD) causes substantial social and economic burden, with ≥70% patients classified as WADII (neck complaint and musculoskeletal sign(s)). Effective management in the acute stage is required to prevent development of chronicity; an issue for 60% of patients. An Active Behavioural Physiotherapy Intervention (ABPI) was developed to address both physical and psychological components of WAD. The ABPI is a novel complex intervention designed through a rigorous sequential multiphase project to prevent transition of acute WAD to chronicity. An external pilot and feasibility cluster randomised double-blind (assessor, participants) parallel two-arm clinical trial was conducted in the UK private sector. The trial compared ABPI versus standard physiotherapy to evaluate trial procedures and feasibility of the ABPI for managing acute WADII in preparation for a future definitive trial. Six private physiotherapy clinics were recruited and cluster randomised using a computer-generated randomisation sequence. Twenty-eight (20 ABPI, 8 standard physiotherapy) participants [median age 38.00 (IQR = 21.50) years] were recruited. Data were analysed descriptively with a priori establishment of success criteria. Ninety-five percent of participants in the ABPI arm fully recovered (Neck Disability Index ≤4, compared to 17% in the standard physiotherapy arm); required fewer treatment sessions; and demonstrated greater improvement in all outcome measures (pain intensity, Cervical Range of Motion, Pressure Pain Threshold, EuroQol-5 Dimensions) except for the Impact of Events Scale and Fear Avoidance Beliefs Questionnaire. The findings support the potential value of the ABPI, and that an adequately powered definitive trial to evaluate effectiveness (clinical, cost) is feasible with minor modifications to procedures.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31071100 PMCID: PMC6508700 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0215803
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Issues affecting participants’ decision to not participate (based on administration data).
| Category of reasons | ABPI | Standard PT |
|---|---|---|
| Reasons for ineligibility (obtained from clinical admin team) | ||
| ➢ Post four weeks after road traffic accident | 54 | 42 |
| ➢ Serious symptoms in other regions | 10 | 6 |
| ➢ Having treatment with another clinic | 8 | 4 |
| ➢ History of cervical surgery | 3 | 2 |
| ➢ Non-English speaking | 1 | - |
| Reasons for declining (obtained from patients by clinical admin team) | ||
| ➢ Did not want to participate | 10 | 12 |
| ➢ Work commitments | 19 | 22 |
| Other reasons | ||
| ➢ Unable to book initial assessment within four weeks | 2 | 1 |
| ➢ Did not want to travel to assessment centre (different physiotherapy clinic) | 2 | 2 |
ABPI, active behavioural physiotherapy intervention; PT, physiotherapy.
Eligible patients interested in participating but unable to attend recruitment.
| Category of reasons | ABPI arm | Standard physiotherapy arm | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WB | ML | SH | GB | BC | SC | |
| Travel issues to assessment centres | 3 | - | - | 1 | 1 | - |
| Work commitment | - | 1 | 2 | - | - | 2 |
| Booking patients would like to reschedule but unable to book an initial assessment within 4-week post injury | - | - | 1 | - | - | 1 |
ABPI, active behavioural physiotherapy intervention; WB, West Bromwich; ML, Moseley; SH, Solihull; GB, Great Barr; BC, Birmingham City; SC, Sutton Coldfield.
Fig 1CONSORT flow diagram (adapted from CONSORT 2010).
Participants’ characteristics by intervention arm at baseline.
| Demographic category | ABPI | Standard physiotherapy |
|---|---|---|
| Age (range, median (IQR)) | 22 to 70, 34.00 (16.00) | 26 to 70, 50.50 (18.75) |
| Gender (male:female) | 17:3 | 2:6 |
| Ethnic group | White (n = 9) | White (n = 6) |
| Asian (n = 7) | Asian (n = 1) | |
| Chinese or other (n = 2) | Chinese or other (n = 1) | |
| Black (n = 1) | ||
| Mixed (n = 1) |
ABPI, active behavioural physiotherapy intervention.
Characteristics of physiotherapists by intervention arm.
| Categories | ABPI | Standard physiotherapy |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | ||
| Median (IQR) | 27.00 (0.00) | 28.00 (0.00) |
| Range | 23 to 31 | 26 to 30 |
| Gender (male:female) | 3:0 | 2:1 |
| Ethnicity (n) | British (2) | British (1) |
| Physiotherapy qualification (n) | Bachelor (2) | Bachelor (2) |
| Physiotherapy years of experience | ||
| Median (IQR) | 3.00 (0.00) | 3.00 (0.00) |
| Range | 2 to 4 | 2 to 6 |
ABPI, active behavioural physiotherapy intervention; IQR, interquartile range.
Primary and secondary outcome measures at baseline and three-month follow-up.
| Outcome measures | ABPI | Standard physiotherapy | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 3-month | Median of | Baseline | 3-month | Median of | |
| NDI | 17.50 (18.00) | 1.00 (2.75) | 16.50 (17.25) | 21.50 (15.50) | 8.00 (8.75) | 6.50 (12.50) |
| VAS | 55.50 (29.50) | 3.50 (8.25) | 48.50 (37.25) | 47.00 (31.25) | 14.50 (14.75) | 37.00 (49.75) |
| IES | 29.50 (31.75) | 7.50 (30.50) | 13.50 (22.00) | 48.00 (32.25) | 26.00 (49.75) | 24.00 (36.50) |
| FABQ | 60.00 (25.00) | 38.00 (19.24) | 9.50 (33.00) | 61.50 (22.25) | 25.50 (19.75) | 22.00 (31.00) |
| EQ-5D Total | 11.00 (5.50) | 6.00 (1.75) | 5.50 (4.75) | 10.50 (7.00) | 8.50 (4.50) | 2.00 (3.00) |
| EQ-5D Mobility | 2.00 (2.00) | 1.00 (0.00) | 1.00 (1.75) | 2.50 (1.75) | 1.00 (1.25) | 0.50 (1.25) |
| EQ-5D Self-care | 2.00 (1.75) | 1.00 (0.00) | 1.00 (1.00) | 2.00 (0.75) | 1.00 (1.00) | 0.00 (0.25) |
| EQ-5D Usual activities | 3.00 (1.75) | 1.00 (0.00) | 1.50 (1.00) | 2.00 (1.00) | 2.00 (0.25) | 0.00 (0.25) |
| EQ-5D Pain/discomfort | 3.00 (0.75) | 1.00 (1.00) | 2.00 (1.00) | 3.00 (1.75) | 2.00 (0.50) | 0.00 (1.00) |
| EQ-5D Anxiety/depression | 2.00 (2.00) | 1.00 (0.00) | 1.00 (1.00) | 2.50 (1.00) | 1.50 (2.50) | 0.00 (2.25) |
| EQ-5D VAS | 57.50 (32.50) | 98.50 (8.00) | 27.00 (24.75) | 67.50 (45.50) | 75.50 (34.75) | -2.00 (19.00) |
| CROM Flexion | 22.50 (7.67) | 46.50 (15.50) | 27.67 (14.00) | 29.00 (13.24) | 47.00 (25.34) | 17.34 (21.01) |
| CROM Extension | 22.83 (17.58) | 36.50 (30.50) | 21.17 (23.59) | 19.83 (24.83) | 46.33 (24.50) | 14.83 (35.33) |
| CROM Left rotation | 29.67 (18.33) | 54.00 (16.08) | 22.00 (28.42) | 40.67 (25.01) | 49.67 (24.50) | -1.00 (26.00) |
| CROM Right rotation | 30.67 (17.83) | 53.34 (25.17) | 32.00 (26.91) | 36.34 (22.16) | 45.00 (17.34) | 4.34 (12.00) |
| CROM Left lateral flexion | 22.34 (13.33) | 34.17 (8.67) | 11.50 (16.58) | 26.00 (12.83) | 26.67 (12.67) | 1.17 (13.25) |
| CROM Right lateral flexion | 22.67 (11.84) | 36.50 (10.75) | 11.17 (15.50) | 22.17 (10.84) | 29.34 (8.42) | 6.67 (8.08) |
| PPT Left levator scapulae | 74.67 (71.75) | 168.67 (180.66) | 90.33 (110.99) | 58.67 (36.66) | 109.34 (71.08) | 63.67 (79.67) |
| PPT Right levator scapulae | 71.50 (69.66) | 197.17 (157.50) | 121.50 (118.33) | 77.17 (44.00) | 134.00 (67.59) | 49.67 (83.09) |
| PPT Left tibialis anterior | 106.17 (101.08) | 223.17 (228.33) | 49.84 (129.75) | 103.17 (41.08) | 168.00 (233.42) | 72.67 (192.42) |
| PPT Right tibialis anterior | 90.17 (110.34) | 211.84 (233.50) | 101.01 (105.00) | 88.50 (24.51) | 163.67 (181.91) | 86.00 (160.58) |
ABPI, Active Behavioural Physiotherapy Intervention; NDI, Neck Disability Index; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale; IES, Impact of Events Scale; FABQ, Fear Avoidance Belief Questionnaire; EQ-5D, EuroQol-5 Dimensions; CROM, cervical range of motion; PPT, Pressure Pain Threshold.
Secondary outcome measures at baseline of followed up and lost to follow-up participants.
| Outcome measures | ABPI | Standard physiotherapy | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Followed up | Lost to follow-up | Followed up | Lost to follow-up | |
| VAS | 58.00 (33.00) | 52.50 (32.50) | 54.50 (48.00) | 46.00 (46.25) |
| IES | 25.50 (26.25) | 37.00 (33.50) | 50.00 (13.25) | 33.50 (41.25) |
| FABQ | 53.00 (30.00) | 62.50 (23.25) | 59.00 (29.75) | 61.50 (20.00) |
| CROM Flexion | 22.33 (9.26) | 23.34 (8.92) | 26.17 (13.67) | 29.17 (20.83) |
| CROM Extension | 18.00 (29.58) | 23.33 (12.67) | 28.83 (22.51) | 12.67 (24.75) |
| CROM Left rotation | 29.00 (21.34) | 29.67 (18.83) | 45.34 (11.17) | 24.67 (25.17) |
| CROM Right rotation | 16.17 (24.67) | 31.84 (14.83) | 41.00 (22.67) | 25.00 (23.50) |
| CROM Left lateral flexion | 21.00 (20.17) | 22.34 (11.67) | 26.67 (3.41) | 19.17 (21.00) |
| CROM Right lateral flexion | 20.33 (21.75) | 22.67 (9.83) | 22.17 (16.00) | 22.34 (14.42) |
| PPT Left levator scapulae | 75.00 (121.84) | 74.67 (68.16) | 58.50 (32.92) | 66.67 (64.08) |
| PPT Right levator scapulae | 69.84 (204.92) | 71.50 (53.66) | 79.83 (33.00) | 60.17 (61.17) |
| PPT Left tibialis anterior | 124.67 (128.42) | 99.67 (95.33) | 102.67 (61.33) | 110.67 (40.83) |
| PPT Right tibialis anterior | 110.67 (157.58) | 86.17 (83.83) | 81.50 (25.34) | 97.17 (31.50) |
ABPI, Active Behavioural Physiotherapy Intervention; VAS, Visual Analogue Scale; IES, Impact of Events Scale; FABQ, Fear Avoidance Belief Questionnaire; CROM, cervical range of motion; PPT, Pressure Pain Threshold.
Cost-effectiveness information.
| Categories | ABPI | Standard physiotherapy |
|---|---|---|
| Treatment sessions (median, IQR) | 4.00 (4.00) | 6.00 (4.50) |
| Physiotherapy costs (median, IQR) | £ 90.00 (70.00) | £ 120.00 (75.00) |
| Physiotherapists’ training costs | £200 | - |
ABPI, active behavioural physiotherapy intervention.
Considerations for a future definitive trial.
| Objectives | Criteria for success | Considerations |
|---|---|---|
| To evaluate the feasibility of procedures (e.g. randomisation, recruitment, collecting data, management and follow-up) | The trial would be considered feasible if it was run smoothly without serious problems or obstructions that were able to stop the study. | All research procedures were feasible but the following issues should be considered: |
| ∘ Randomisation | ➢ No issue regarding the randomisation (i.e. no report regarding participants’ disagreement with treatment allocation). | |
| ∘ Recruitment | ➢ Ideally, double blinding should be kept in order to maintain the quality of the trial but more assessors need to be provided for every clinic in order to reduce the risk factor of journey issues (patients did not want to travel to other physiotherapy clinics) if a future trial is to be sufficiently funded. | |
| ➢ Increase the number of recruited physiotherapy clinics/insurance companies in order to increase the recruitment rate. | ||
| ➢ An increase in the number of assessors may be considered. Setting assessment centres did not work in this trial due to participants’ journey issues. It would be ideal to have an assessor in each clinic to enable the baseline assessment to take place local to each clinic prior to the first treatment session. That would then stop the patient needing to make the separate journey for the assessment or travelling to different physiotherapy clinics. | ||
| ∘ Collecting data | ➢ Information for cost-effectiveness analysis should be considered in another way (set up an electronic system by collaborating with an insurance company or a physiotherapy company in order to record relevant information rather than giving a diary pocket book to participants). | |
| ➢ Collecting level of education (less than post-secondary), headache at inception and low back pain, which are the significant predictors of persistent WAD. | ||
| ∘ Management | ➢ No difficulty with the management for the trial. | |
| ∘ Follow-up | ➢ Face-to-face follow-up may be an issue because participants get back to their normal life and they may not want to come to a clinic owing to their work commitments. Telephone follow-up may be an interesting option for a future trial. | |
| To evaluate recruitment rates, refusal rates and retention in the private sector in the UK | The trial would be considered feasible if
≥ 50% of eligible patients were recruited At least 3 participants a week per intervention arm were recruited ≥ 80% of all recruited participants completed the follow-up at 3 months | Overall, the trial was feasible as:
70% of eligible patients were recruited An average of one (1.27) person was recruited per week (excluding temporary stopping of the trial). This point was an issue to modify in the future trial. An increase in the number of recruited physiotherapy clinics may be an option. ~93% of recruited participants completed 3-month follow-up |
| To evaluate dropout rates of participants in the private sector in the UK | The trial would be considered feasible if ≤ 20% of all recruited participants dropped out | 2/8 (25%) participants were lost to follow-up at 3 months. Therefore, the overall dropout in this trial was ~7%. |
| To estimate the required sample for a definitive trial | The trial would be considered feasible if it was feasible to achieve the sample size for a cluster RCT based upon recruitment data | The required sample size for a cluster RCT is 238 patients using 24 physiotherapy clinics based on power = 90%, significance level = 0.05, difference of NDI = 4 and cluster size = 10. |
| To evaluate the feasibility of data collection for cost-effectiveness analysis | The trial would be considered feasible if the following components of the cost-effective analysis were collected with minimal missing data:
General information (e.g. current work status and salary) Direct medical costs
Medical costs (e.g. physiotherapy, general practice and complementary medicine) Resource uses (e.g. diagnosis tests) Indirect medical costs
Participant journey costs Training costs for physiotherapists in the experimental arm | Only 2 participants returned their diary pocket book. Another strategy for collecting information for cost-effectiveness analysis should be considered in another way for a future trial. Setting up an electronic recording system by collaborating with an insurance company or a physiotherapy company may be a good option in order to collect relevant information. |
WAD, whiplash-associated disorder; RCT, randomised controlled trial; NDI, neck disability index.