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Promoting physical activity in rheumatoid arthritis through a physiotherapist led behaviour change‑based intervention (PIPPRA): a feasibility randomised trial

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posted on 2024-09-11, 13:56 authored by Louise Larkin, Sean McKenna, Tadhg Pyne, Paul Comerford, Anusha Moses, Ailish Folan, Stephen GallagherStephen Gallagher, Liam GlynnLiam Glynn, Alexander Fraser, Bente Appel Esbensen, Norelee KennedyNorelee Kennedy

 Physical activity (PA) is recommended as a key component in the management of people with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The objective of this study was to examine the feasibility of a physiotherapist led, behaviour change (BC) theory-informed, intervention to promote PA in people with RA who have low levels of current PA. A feasibility randomised trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03644160) of people with RA over 18 years recruited from outpatient rheumatology clinics and classified as insufficiently physically active using the Godin−Shephard Leisure Time Physical Activity Questionnaire. Participants were randomised to intervention group (4 BC physiotherapy sessions in 8 weeks) delivered in person/virtually or control group (PA information leaflet only). Feasibility targets (eligibility, recruitment, and refusal), protocol adherence and acceptability were measured. Health care professionals (HCPs) involved in the study and patients in the intervention and control arms were interviewed to determine acceptability. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse the data with SPSS (v27) with interviews analysed using content analysis using NVivo (v14). Three hundred and twenty participants were identified as potentially eligible, with n = 183 (57%) eligible to participate, of which n = 58 (32%) consented to participate. The recruitment rate was 6.4 per month. Due to the impact of COVID-19 on the study, recruitment took place over two separate phases in 2020 and 2021. Of the 25 participants completing the full study, 23 were female (mean age 60 years (SD 11.5)), with n = 11 allocated to intervention group and n = 14 to control. Intervention group participants completed 100% of sessions 1 & 2, 88% of session 3 and 81% of session 4. The study design and intervention were acceptable overall to participants, with enhancements suggested. The PIPPRA study to improve promote physical activity in people with RA who have low PA levels was feasible, acceptable and safe. Despite the impact of COVID-19 on the recruitment and retention of patients, the study provides preliminary evidence that this physiotherapist led BC intervention is feasible and a full definitive intervention should be undertaken. Health care professionals involved in the study delivery and the patient participants described a number of positive aspects to the study with some suggestions to enhance the design. These findings hence inform the design of a future efficacy-focused clinical trial. 

History

Publication

Rheumatology International, 2024, 44, pp.779–793

Publisher

Springer

Other Funding information

Open Access funding provided by the IReL Consor?tium. This study was funded by the Health Research Board, Ireland (DIFA_2018_004)

Also affiliated with

  • Health Research Institute (HRI)

Department or School

  • Allied Health
  • School of Medicine
  • Psychology

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