Robot-assisted therapy for long-term upper-limb impairment after stroke

Albert C Lo, Peter D Guarino, Lorie G Richards, Jodie K Haselkorn, George F Wittenberg, Daniel G Federman, Robert J Ringer, Todd H Wagner, Hermano I Krebs, Bruce T Volpe, Christopher T Bever Jr, Dawn M Bravata, Pamela W Duncan, Barbara H Corn, Alysia D Maffucci, Stephen E Nadeau, Susan S Conroy, Janet M Powell, Grant D Huang, Peter Peduzzi, Albert C Lo, Peter D Guarino, Lorie G Richards, Jodie K Haselkorn, George F Wittenberg, Daniel G Federman, Robert J Ringer, Todd H Wagner, Hermano I Krebs, Bruce T Volpe, Christopher T Bever Jr, Dawn M Bravata, Pamela W Duncan, Barbara H Corn, Alysia D Maffucci, Stephen E Nadeau, Susan S Conroy, Janet M Powell, Grant D Huang, Peter Peduzzi

Abstract

Background: Effective rehabilitative therapies are needed for patients with long-term deficits after stroke.

Methods: In this multicenter, randomized, controlled trial involving 127 patients with moderate-to-severe upper-limb impairment 6 months or more after a stroke, we randomly assigned 49 patients to receive intensive robot-assisted therapy, 50 to receive intensive comparison therapy, and 28 to receive usual care. Therapy consisted of 36 1-hour sessions over a period of 12 weeks. The primary outcome was a change in motor function, as measured on the Fugl-Meyer Assessment of Sensorimotor Recovery after Stroke, at 12 weeks. Secondary outcomes were scores on the Wolf Motor Function Test and the Stroke Impact Scale. Secondary analyses assessed the treatment effect at 36 weeks.

Results: At 12 weeks, the mean Fugl-Meyer score for patients receiving robot-assisted therapy was better than that for patients receiving usual care (difference, 2.17 points; 95% confidence interval [CI], -0.23 to 4.58) and worse than that for patients receiving intensive comparison therapy (difference, -0.14 points; 95% CI, -2.94 to 2.65), but the differences were not significant. The results on the Stroke Impact Scale were significantly better for patients receiving robot-assisted therapy than for those receiving usual care (difference, 7.64 points; 95% CI, 2.03 to 13.24). No other treatment comparisons were significant at 12 weeks. Secondary analyses showed that at 36 weeks, robot-assisted therapy significantly improved the Fugl-Meyer score (difference, 2.88 points; 95% CI, 0.57 to 5.18) and the time on the Wolf Motor Function Test (difference, -8.10 seconds; 95% CI, -13.61 to -2.60) as compared with usual care but not with intensive therapy. No serious adverse events were reported.

Conclusions: In patients with long-term upper-limb deficits after stroke, robot-assisted therapy did not significantly improve motor function at 12 weeks, as compared with usual care or intensive therapy. In secondary analyses, robot-assisted therapy improved outcomes over 36 weeks as compared with usual care but not with intensive therapy. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00372411.)

2010 Massachusetts Medical Society

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Enrollment and Outcomes.
Figure 2. Changes in Primary and Secondary…
Figure 2. Changes in Primary and Secondary Outcomes during the 36-Week Study Period, as Compared with Baseline
Data are least-squares means at each time point and overall. Values have been adjusted for baseline scores, the Comorbidity Disease Index, and the study site as a fixed effect. For between-group comparisons of scores on the Fugl-Meyer Assessment (Panels A and B) and the Stroke Impact Scale (Panels E and F), higher scores indicate better functioning. For comparisons of scores (time) on the Wolf Motor Function Test (Panels C and D), higher scores indicate worse function. During the 36-week period, patients receiving robot-assisted therapy had significantly better performance than those receiving usual care on the Fugl-Meyer Assessment and the Wolf Motor Function Test, but the between-group difference on the Stroke Impact Scale was not significant (P>0.022). Differences between patients receiving robot-assisted therapy and those receiving intensive comparison therapy (ICT) were not significant for any of the three tests. I bars indicate standard errors.

Source: PubMed

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