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Tailored exercise management versus usual care for people aged 80 years or older with hip/knee osteoarthritis and comorbidities (TEMPO): multicentre feasibility randomised controlled trial in England

Por: Nicolson · P. J. A. · Holden · M. A. · Marian · I. · Saeedi · E. · Williamson · E. · Moylan · D. · Stone · M. · Hopewell · S. · Lamb · S. E. · TEMPO feasibility trial collaborators · Barker · Dickson · Price · Webber
Objective

To assess the feasibility of conducting a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT) to test the clinical and cost-effectiveness of a tailored exercise intervention compared with usual care for people aged 80 years and older with hip and/or knee osteoarthritis (OA) and comorbidities.

Design

Two-arm, parallel-design, multicentre, pragmatic, feasibility RCT.

Setting

Four National Health Service outpatient physiotherapy services across England.

Participants

Adults aged 80 years and over with clinical hip and/or knee OA and ≥1 comorbidity.

Interventions

Participants were randomised 1:1 via a central web-based system to be offered: (1) a 12-week tailored exercise programme or (2) usual care. Participants and outcome assessors were not blinded to treatment allocation.

Feasibility objectives

(1) Ability to screen and recruit participants; (2) retention of participants at 14-week follow-up; (3) intervention fidelity (proportion of participants who received ≥4 intervention sessions as per protocol) and (4) participant engagement (assessed by home exercise adherence).

Results

Between 12 May 2022 and 26 January 2023, 133 potential participants were screened, of whom 94 were eligible. The main reasons for ineligibility were symptoms not consistent with hip or knee OA (10/39, 25.6%) or already having had a physiotherapy appointment (8/39, 20.5%). 51 of 94 (54%) eligible participants were recruited. Participants had a mean age of 84 years (SD 3.5), 31 (60.8%) were female and 96.1% reported their ethnicity as White British (n=49/51). 45 of 51 participants (88%) provided outcome data at the 14-week follow-up time point. Four or more intervention sessions were attended by 13/25 (52%) participants. Home exercise log completion declined over time: 6/23 participants (26.1%) returned completed exercise logs for all 12 weeks. The median number of days home exercises were recorded each week was 5 (range 0–7).

Conclusions

This study demonstrated that a definitive trial would be feasible. Before proceeding, modifications to ensure recruitment of a diverse population and intervention fidelity should be addressed.

Trial registration number

ISRCTN75983430.

PRevEnting FracturEs in REnal Disease-1 (PREFERRED-1): protocol for a pilot study of a pragmatic, randomised controlled trial of denosumab for the prevention of fragility fractures in haemodialysis

Por: Clemens · K. K. · Cowan · A. · Dixon · S. · Naylor · K. · Weir · M. A. · Thain · J. · Khan · T. · Silver · S. · Molnar · A. O. · Sultan · N. · Holden · R. M. · Hiremath · S. · Wald · R. · Kitchlu · A. · Arnold · J. · Field · B. · Garg · A. X.
Objective

Patients receiving haemodialysis are at very high risk of fragility fracture, yet there are no proven treatments for fracture prevention. We will advance a pilot study on the feasibility of a large, pragmatic, randomised controlled trial (RCT) of denosumab for fragility fracture prevention in haemodialysis.

Trial design

PRevEnting FracturEs in REnal Disease-1 is a pragmatic, open-label, pilot study of an RCT of a denosumab care pathway embedded in routine care haemodialysis centres.

Methods

We will recruit at least 60 participants at high risk of fracture from at least 6 haemodialysis centres in Ontario, Canada. They must be aged 40 years or older, have access to provincial drug coverage, have appropriate baseline calcium and parathyroid hormone levels and be deemed suitable for denosumab by their kidney care provider. Participants will be randomised 1:1 to denosumab (with supports to mitigate hypocalcaemia) versus usual care using block randomisation by a central statistician (computer-generated sequence). Primary outcomes include recruitment feasibility and adherence. Secondary outcomes include safety (hypocalcaemia) and participant satisfaction with our protocol and processes. Study investigators and data analysts will be blind to treatment allocation.

We will present results descriptively. The trial was approved by Clinical Trials Ontario and local research ethics boards across study sites.

Results

Primary and secondary outcomes will be published on trial completion.

Conclusions

This pilot will inform the feasibility of conducting a large-scale, efficiently run, pragmatic RCT to test whether a denosumab care pathway safely reduces the risk of fragility fracture in patients receiving haemodialysis. Results have the potential to transform fracture care in real-world patients with kidney and metabolic bone disease.

Trial registration number

NCT05096195.

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