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Progressive exercise versus best practice advice for adults aged 50 years or over after ankle fracture: the AFTER pilot randomised controlled trial

Authors :
David J Keene
Sarah E Lamb
Sally Hopewell
Matthew L Costa
Keith Willett
Elizabeth Tutton
Susan J Dutton
Vicki S Barber
Anthony C Redmond
Nicholas Peckham
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 12, Iss 11 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2022.

Abstract

Objective The aim of the Ankle Fracture Treatment: Enhancing Rehabilitation (AFTER) study, a multicentre external pilot parallel-group randomised controlled trial (RCT), was to assess feasibility of a definitive trial comparing rehabilitation approaches after ankle fracture.Setting Five UK National Health Service hospitals.Participants Participants were aged 50 years and over with an ankle fracture requiring immobilisation for at least 4 weeks.Interventions Participants were allocated 1:1 via a central web-based randomisation system to: (1) best practice advice (one session of physiotherapy, up to two optional additional advice sessions) or (2) progressive exercise (up to six sessions of physiotherapy).Primary outcome measures Feasibility: (1) participation rate, (2) intervention adherence and (3) retention.Results Sixty-one of 112 (54%) eligible participants participated, exceeding progression criteria for participation of 25%. Recruitment progression criteria was 1.5 participants per site per month and 1.4 was observed. At least one intervention session was delivered for 28/30 (93%) of best practice advice and 28/31 (90%) of progressive exercise participants, exceeding the 85% progression criteria. For those providing follow-up data, the proportion of participants reporting performance of home exercises in the best practice advice and the progressive exercise groups at 3 months was 20/23 (87%) and 21/25 (84%), respectively. Mean time from injury to starting physiotherapy was 74.1 days (95% CI 53.9 to 94.1 days) for the best practice advice and 72.7 days (95% CI 54.7 to 88.9) for the progressive exercise group. Follow-up rate (6-month Olerud and Molander Ankle Score) was 28/30 (93%) for the best practice advice group and 26/31 (84%) in the progressive exercise group with an overall follow-up rate of 89%.Conclusions This pilot RCT demonstrated that a definitive trial would be feasible. The main issues to address for a definitive trial are intervention modifications to enable earlier provision of rehabilitation and ensuring similar rates of follow-up in each group.Trial registration number ISRCTN16612336.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
12
Issue :
11
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Open
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7ce116586102473782d2a31468f0c250
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059235