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Safety, feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effects of the Neurofenix platform for Rehabilitation via HOMe Based gaming exercise for the Upper-limb post Stroke (RHOMBUS): results of a feasibility intervention study

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posted on 2022-12-09, 09:56 authored by Cherry Kilbride, Daniel J M Scott, Tom Butcher, Meriel Norris, Alyson Warland, Nana Anokye, Elizabeth Cassidy, Karen Baker, Dimitrios A Athanasiou, Guillem Singla-Buxarrais, Alexander Nowicky, Jennifer RyanJennifer Ryan

Objectives: To investigate the safety, feasibility and acceptability of the Neurofenix platform for home-based rehabilitation of the upper limb (UL).

Design: A non-randomised intervention design with a parallel process evaluation.

Setting: Participants' homes, South-East England.

Participants: Thirty adults (≥18 years), minimum 12-week poststroke, not receiving UL rehabilitation, scoring 9-25 on the Motricity Index (elbow and shoulder), with sufficient cognitive and communicative abilities to participate.

Interventions: Participants were trained to use the platform, followed by 1 week of graded game-play exposure and 6-week training, aiming for a minimum 45 min, 5 days/week.

Outcomes: Safety was determined by assessing pain and poststroke fatigue at 8 and 12 weeks, and adverse events (AEs). Impairment, activity and participation outcomes were measured. Intervention feasibility was determined by the amount of specialist training and support required to complete the intervention, time and days spent training, and number of UL movements performed. Acceptability was assessed by a satisfaction questionnaire and semistructured interviews.

Results: Participants (14 women; mean (SD) age 60.0 (11.3) years) were a median of 4.9 years poststroke (minimum-maximum: 1-28 years). Twenty-seven participants completed the intervention. The odds of having shoulder pain were lower at 8 weeks (OR 0.45, 95% CI 0.24 to 0.83, p=0.010) and 12 weeks (OR 0.46, 95% CI 0.25 to 0.86, p=0.014) compared with baseline. Fugl-Meyer upper extremity, Motor Activity Log and passive range of movement improved. No other gains were recorded. Poststroke fatigue did not change. Thirty mild and short-term AEs and one serious (unrelated) AE were reported by 19 participants. Participants trained with the platform for a median of 17.4 hours over 7 weeks (minimum-maximum: 0.3-46.9 hours), equating to a median of 149 min per week. The median satisfaction score was 36 out of 40.

Conclusion: The Neurofenix platform is a safe, feasible and well accepted way to support UL training for people at least three months poststroke.

Funding

Innovate UK grant number 104188

History

Comments

The original article is available at https://bmjopen.bmj.com/

Published Citation

Kilbride C. et al. Safety, feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effects of the Neurofenix platform for Rehabilitation via HOMe Based gaming exercise for the Upper-limb post Stroke (RHOMBUS): results of a feasibility intervention study. BMJ Open. 2022;12(2):e052555.

Publication Date

28 February 2022

PubMed ID

35228279

Department/Unit

  • Public Health and Epidemiology

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group Ltd

Version

  • Published Version (Version of Record)