Top Banner
“Evidence based rehabilitation” Professor Cath Sackley PhD, MSc, MCSP, FCOT Rehabilitation Sciences, University of East Anglia
29

“ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Jan 21, 2016

Download

Documents

bayard

Professor Cath Sackley PhD, MSc, MCSP, FCOT Rehabilitation Sciences, University of East Anglia. “ Evidence based rehabilitation”. A cluster randomised controlled trial of an occupational therapy intervention for residents with stroke living in UK care-homes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

“Evidence based rehabilitation”

Professor Cath Sackley PhD, MSc, MCSP, FCOT

Rehabilitation Sciences, University of East Anglia

Page 2: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

A cluster randomised controlled trial of an occupational therapy

intervention for residents with stroke living in UK care-homes.

Cath Sackley, Marion Walker, Andrea Roalfe, Caroline Watkins, Chris Burton, Jonathan Mant, Karen Lett, Keith Wheatley, Bart

Sheehan, Lesley Sharp, Katie Stant, Sheriden Bevan, Farzana Rashid, Joanna Fletcher Smith, Kerry Steel, Guy Peryer, Gina Sands,

Joanna Briggs, Kate Wilde, Peter Sharp, Lisa Irvine, Garry Barton, Kath Mortimer, Max Feltham

National Institute for Health Research. NIHR HTA

Page 3: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Research Programme through clinical interest

Page 4: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

~ 25% of all stroke survivors are unable to go home after their stroke

• Significant rise in the number of people living with stroke related disabilities between 1990 – 2010

• Stroke survivors residing in care homes are more physically and cognitively impaired with high support needs compared to those living in the community

Page 5: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

UK MRC Framework for Evaluating Complex Interventions

Theory Modelling Exploratory trial Definitive RCT Long termimplementation

Pre-clinical

Phase I

Phase II

Phase III

Phase IV

Continuum of increasing evidence

Page 6: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Phase 1 A survey of immobility related complications

Residents with strokeContractures- 59 (48%)Pressure sores- 24 (20%)Shoulder pain-59 (48%)Falls- 80 (66%) Other pain- 59 (48%)

Page 7: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”
Page 8: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

How do residents spend their days?

walking with assistance 1.7%

walking without assistance

0.3%standing 1.0%

Sitting (eyes open or

closed) 97.0%

Sackley C. et al. 2006. International Journal of Therapy and Rehabilitation, 13(8): 370-373.

Page 9: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Phase 1 Staff Attitudes

Staff feel they are employed to careCare viewed as ‘doing for’ rather than maintaining independenceWould like to know more about basic rehab

Page 10: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Sackley C.M. et al. 2001. Age and Ageing, 30(6): 532-3.

AHP provision in care homes:

• At best, patchy

• Rarely used qualified staff

• Inequality in access (particularly Occupational Therapy)

Staff attitudes :

• Staff feel they are employed to care

• Care viewed as ‘doing for’ rather than maintaining independence

• Staff showed an interest in learning about rehabilitation practices

Care Home AHP provision Regional Survey

Page 11: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Sackley C. et al. 2006. Stroke, 37(9):2336-41.

Cluster RCT (n=118). Primary outcome: Barthel @ 3 months.

Poor Outcome

20/63 (32%) were worse/dead in the intervention group compared with 31/55 (56%) in the control group.

Group difference –25% (95% CI –51% to 1%), similar at 6 months.

Self Care ADL

BI score had increased by 0.6 (SD 3.9) in the intervention group and decreased by 0.9 (2.2) in the control group.

Group difference 1.5 (95% CI –0.5 to 3.5).

Mobility

RMI score increased by 0.4 (3.0) in the intervention group decreased by –0.4 (1.9) in control.

Group difference: 0.8 (95% CI –0.6 to 2.2).

OTCH Phase II exploratory trial

Page 12: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Standard mean difference (random) (95% Cl) Study

Corr 1995 0.27 (-0.16 to 0.70) Gilbertson 2000 0.17 (-0.18 to 0.53) Chiu 2004 0.33 (-0.21 to 0.88) Walker 1996 0.10 (-0.66 to 0.86) Logan 1997 0.14 (-0.30 to 0.57) Walker 1999 0.38 (0.07 to 0.69) Sackley 2006 0.40 (0.00 to 0.80) Parker 2001 -0.08 (-0.31 to 0.15)

Total (95% Cl) 0.18 (0.04 to 0.32) -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1Favours control

Favours treatment

Test for heterogeneity: x2=8.08, df=7, P=0.33, /2=13.3% Test for overall effect: z=2.45, P=0.01

Legg L.et al. 2007. BMJ, 335(7626):922.

Meta-analysis: OT on personal activities of daily living

Page 13: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

OTCH Phase III Cluster RCT

Care-home setting: Birmingham, Bangor, Portsmouth, Nottingham, Central Lancashire, Peninsula, West Midlands (n=228)

Participants: 1042 care home residents with a history of stroke or TIA

Exclusion: Care home residents receiving end of life care.

Inclusive: Includes those with communication and cognitive impairments.

Primary outcome and timepoint:

Independent assessment of Barthel @ 3 months.

Secondary outcomes : Barthel @ 6 & 12 months.

Rivermead Mobility, Depression (GDS-15), Quality of Life (EQ-5D).

Analysis: Intention to treat

Economic evaluation: Social perspective

Page 14: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Randomised (228 homes, 1042 participants)

Allocated to Occupational therapy

114 homes, average size= 5,

568 participants

Allocated to Control

114 homes, average size= 4·2,

474 participants

Received allocation= 545

Did not receive allocation = 23

Reasons: 16 died, 7 withdrawals

Received allocation= 458

Did not receive allocation = 16

Reasons: 15 died, 1 withdrawal

3 month assessment= 491 (96% retention)

Primary outcome completed = 479 (113 care homes)

3 incomplete, 9 missing, 48 died, 1 withdrawal, 3 ineligible, 2 lost to follow-up

3 month assessment= 416 ( 93% retention)

Primary outcome completed= 391 (111 care homes)

12 incomplete, 13 missing, 37 died, 1 ineligible,

4 lost to follow-up

12 month assessment= 386 (84% retention)

Primary outcome completed= 355 (104 care homes)

14 incomplete, 17 missing, 54 died, 3 withdrawals,

3 lost to follow-up

12 month assessment= 306 (83% retention)

Primary outcome completed= 285 (100 care homes)

7 incomplete, 14 missing, 64 died, 5 withdrawals,

5 lost to follow-up

6 month assessment= 446 (90% retention)

Primary outcome completed = 424 (111 care homes)

7 incomplete, 15 missing, 41 died, 4 withdrawals

4 lost to follow-up

6 month assessment= 380 (90% retention)

Primary outcome completed= 369 (109 care homes)

2 incomplete, 9 missing, 33 died, 3 withdrawals, 4 lost to follow-up

Page 15: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Interventions: Short term (3 month) targeted OT to improve mobility & self-care independence

• Information, advice & caregiver training

• Activity & mobility training

Interventions 1

Page 16: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Control: Standard care (not a lot)

Interventions 2

Interventions: Short term (3 month) targeted OT to improve mobility & self-care independence

• Assistive devices & adaptations

• Wheelchairs & seating reviewed

Page 17: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Summary of OTCH Intervention Framework

• Employed a patient-centred goal-setting approach

• Treatment regime developed using consensus professional opinion

• 3-month intervention to improve mobility & self-care independence

• Staff training was a key component.

• Six Categories:

- Assessment, Reassessment and Goal Planning

- Communication

- ADL training

- Transfers and mobility (including wheelchairs)

- Adaptive equipment (including seating)

- Other (such as treating impairments)

Page 18: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Barthel Index at Baseline

Randomisation arm

Barthel Index [0-20] Occupational therapy Control

Very Severe [0-4] 268 (47.7%) 234 (50.1%)

Severe [5-9] 129 (23.0%) 104 (22.3%)

Moderate [10-14] 91 (16.2%) 76 (16.3%)

Mild [15-19] 64 (11.4%) 46 (9.9%)

Independent [20] 10 (1.8%) 7 (1.5%)

Total 562 467

Page 19: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Interventionmean (sd)

nControl

mean (sd) n

Sheffield [0 – 20] impaired [<15]

10.9 (7.1) 424 (58%)

11.9 (6.9) 374 (57%)

MMSE [0-30 ]cognitive impairment [0-20]

13.6 (9.5) 398 (70%)

13.2 (9.0) 362 (73%)

Barthel [0-20] 6.5 (5.8) 562 6.3 (5.7) 467

Rivermead [0-15] 3.1 (3.8) 557 2.8 (3.7)  456

GDS [0-15] 6.8 (3.9) 498 6.4 (3.5) 415

EQ-5D (3L) 0.20 (0.38) 506 0.24 (0.36) 423

Additional Participant Characteristics at Baseline

Page 20: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Therapy Time Distribution

• Visits = 2538 to N= 498 residents

• Mean = 5.1 (SD 3.04) visits/resident

• Median Duration = 30mins (IQR 15-60)

• Six Categories:

- Assessment and Goal Planning: 23%

- Communication: 49%

- ADL training: 7%

- Transfers and mobility : 8%

- Adaptive equipment : 7%

- Other : 6%

Page 21: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Primary & Secondary Outcomes @ 3 months

Randomisation armOccupational

TherapyControl

Adj mean* (se)

n Adj mean* (se)

n ICC Difference in adjusted means

(95% CI)

P value

Barthel 5.47 (0.20)

539 5.29 (0.21)

436 0.09 0.19

(-0.33 to 0.70)

0.48

Rivermead 2.74 (0.11)

465 2.73 (0.12)

382 0.04 0.02

(-0.28 to 0.31)

0.90

GDS-15 6.09 (0.21)

383 6.30 (0.22)

324 0.07 -0.21

(-0.76 to 0.33)

0.44

EQ-5D

0.24 (0.02)

409 0.23 (0.02)

338 0.06 0.01

(-0.04 to 0.06)

0.65

Page 22: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Process Evaluation Summary

• Embedded process evaluation to develop an explanatory account of how the intervention was implemented within the trial.

• Interviews with trial therapists and critical incidents.

• Four overarching mechanisms which characterised implementation:

(1) Balancing research and professional requirements,

(2) Building rapport with care home staff,

(3) Re-engineering the personal environments of care home patients,

(4) Therapists’ learning about the intervention and its impacts over time.

• How these mechanisms operated was contingent on multiple factors such as the prior experience of therapists, and the contexts

characterising the care homes included in the trial.

• Masterson-Algar , et al. Journal of Evaluation and Clinical Practice, submitted.

Page 23: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Health Economics Summary

• The intervention costs more than the NICE cost-effectiveness threshold of £20,000/QALY across all analyses.

• Significant difference in cost /QALY between participants in nursing homes (£63k/QALY) compared with

residential care (£28k/QALY).

• Based on current cost-effectiveness thresholds, we would not endorse the OTCH programme.

Page 24: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Summary

• Neutral findings are deemed as robust .

• Participant baseline characteristics were representative of the UK care home population, in regards to age,

gender balance, levels of frailty and support needed.

• The OT treatment offered to participants was similar to an NHS intervention, indicated by the OTCH

process evaluation.

• The evidence does not support the use of an OT package to increase or maintain abilities in personal

activities of daily living, for an older care home population with stroke-related disabilities.

Page 25: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Conclusions

• These neutral findings are similar to those reported in other recently reported RCTs conducted in a care-

home population (Underwood et al, 2013; Kerse et al, 2008).

• These studies assessed the influence of exercise on depression ratings using the GDS, and the influence of

functional activity on quality of life / frequency of falls.

• Both trials reported either a neutral or a minimal effect, mediated by levels of cognitive impairment.

• What are the next steps for research in this clinically complex population with high incidence of depression,

cognitive and physical impairment?

Page 26: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

OT Intervention with John

Some of the ‘perks’ of being involved in stroke research…

John was interviewed by local TV news and enjoyed his 15 minutes of fame!

Page 27: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

OT Intervention with John

Some of the ‘perks’ of being involved in stroke research…

John met HRH Princess Anne when she visited the research unit

Page 28: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

OT Intervention with John

Some of the ‘perks’ of being involved in stroke research…

Notts County FC acknowledged his support with a lifetime season ticket and merchandise

Page 29: “ Evidence based rehabilitation”

Acknowledgements