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Deploying Digital Prosthetic Interface Technology and Exercise in Dysvascular Amputees
NCT05656924 · Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
In plain English
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Official title
Improving the Health Status of Dysvascular Amputees by Deploying Digital Prosthetic Interface Technology in Combination With an Exercise Intervention
About this study
The study will test the hypothesis that the use of a digital approach to the design and implementation of socket and liner technology (herein referred to as "digital prosthetic interface technology") leads to better health of the residuum (compared to traditional socket and liner technology). This hypothesis will be tested by recruiting a group of dysvascular amputees (herein meant to refer to individuals who lost a lower limb secondary diabetes mellitus type II) and by randomizing them to either receiving a digital prosthetic interface technology or a traditional socket and liner system. Furthermore, the study will assess if the digital prosthetic interface technology improves adherence to an exercise program and results in better clinical outcomes. To test this hypothesis, an exercise intervention will be deployed by relying on coaching and mobile health technology to encourage adherence to a walking program targeting dysvascular transtibial amputees. This exercise intervention is an extension of pilot work that demonstrated the suitability of mobile health technology to implement an exercise-based intervention program in dysvascular amputees.
Eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
* Unilateral transtibial amputation within the past 4-16 months
* Etiology secondary to complications of Diabetes Mellitus (DM) type II
* Current use of a prosthesis, with at least 2 months prior use
* K2 or K3 level (as determined using the Amputee Mobility Predictor assessment tool)
* Own a smartphone
Exclusion Criteria:
* Amputation due to cancer or macrotrauma or acute hemorrhage
* Bilateral amputation
* Medically or surgically unstable contralateral lower extremity as determined by medical criteria (e.g., critical limb ischemia)
* Severe residual limb pain that limits function preventing participation in an exercise-based program
* Medical conditions that would interfere with subject's participation in regular sustained exercise
* Anthropometric characteristics that are not compatible with the technology used to scan the residuum and manufacture the liner and socket (e.g., a residuum circumference greater than 32 inches would not be compatible with the device used to scan the residuum)
* Current pregnancy
Study design
Enrollment target: 38 participants
Allocation: randomized
Masking: none
Age groups: adult, older_adult
Timeline
Starts: 2023-12-20
Estimated completion: 2026-12-31
Last updated: 2025-04-03
Interventions
Device: digital prosthetic interface technology
Primary outcomes
- • Difference in intra-socket interface pressure between the two groups (Baseline)
- • Difference in step counts between the two groups (12 months)
Sponsor
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital · other
With: Bionic Skins LLC, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
Contacts & investigators
ContactPaolo Bonato, PhD · contact · pbonato@mgh.harvard.edu · 617-952-6319
InvestigatorPaolo Bonato, PhD · principal_investigator, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
All locations (1)
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital BostonRecruiting
Boston, Massachusetts, United States