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A pilot randomized controlled trial evaluating outdoor community walking for knee osteoarthritis: walk.

Authors :
Drummen SJJ
Balogun S
Lahham A
Bennell K
Hinman RS
Callisaya M
Cai G
Otahal P
Winzenberg T
Wang Z
Antony B
Munugoda IP
Martel-Pelletier J
Pelletier JP
Abram F
Jones G
Aitken D
Source :
Clinical rheumatology [Clin Rheumatol] 2023 May; Vol. 42 (5), pp. 1409-1421. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Jan 24.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives: To determine the feasibility of a randomized controlled trial (RCT) examining outdoor walking on knee osteoarthritis (KOA) clinical outcomes and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) structural changes.<br />Method: This was a 24-week parallel two-arm pilot RCT in Tasmania, Australia. KOA participants were randomized to either a walking plus usual care group or a usual care control group. The walking group trained 3 days/week. The primary outcome was feasibility assessed by changes being required to the study design, recruitment, randomization, program adherence, safety, and retention. Exploratory outcomes were changes in symptoms, physical performance/activity, and MRI measures.<br />Results: Forty participants (mean age 66 years (SD 1.4) and 60% female) were randomized to walking (n = 24) or usual care (n = 16). Simple randomization resulted in a difference in numbers randomized to the two groups. During the study, class sizes were reduced from 10 to 8 participants to improve supervision, and exclusion criteria were added to facilitate program adherence. In the walking group, total program adherence was 70.0% and retention 70.8% at 24 weeks. The walking group had a higher number of mild adverse events and experienced clinically important improvements in symptoms (e.g., visual analogue scale (VAS) knee pain change in the walking group: - 38.7 mm [95% CI - 47.1 to - 30.3] versus usual care group: 4.3 mm [- 4.9 to 13.4]).<br />Conclusions: This study supports the feasibility of a full-scale RCT given acceptable adherence, retention, randomization, and safety, and recruitment challenges have been identified. Large symptomatic benefits support the clinical usefulness of a subsequent trial.<br />Trial Registration Number: 12618001097235. Key Points • This pilot study is the first to investigate the effects of an outdoor walking program on knee osteoarthritis clinical outcomes and MRI joint structure, and it indicates that a full-scale RCT is feasible. • The outdoor walking program (plus usual care) resulted in large improvements in self-reported knee osteoarthritis symptoms compared to usual care alone. • The study identified recruitment challenges, and the manuscript explores these in more details and provides recommendations for future studies.<br /> (© 2023. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1434-9949
Volume :
42
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical rheumatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36692651
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10067-022-06477-5