The overall goal of this multisite, randomized clinical trial is to evaluate the short- and long-term effectiveness of a Clinical Practice Guideline (CPG)-adherent physical therapy approach to patellofemoral pain (PFP) management among military Service members. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Can a CPG-adherent care approach to PFP management improve short- and long-term knee function, pain, and confidence with completing duty-related activities? 2. Can a CPG-adherent care approach to PFP management reduce utilization of healthcare resources and analgesic medication prescription at 12-month follow-up? 3. Are there patient- and care-specific factors that predict or mediate clinical benefit from physical therapy care for PFP? Researchers will compare the CPG-adherent physical therapy intervention to usual physical therapy care in the Military Health System. Participants will: 1) be randomized to receive CPG-adherent care or usual care for PFP management; 2) attend physical therapy corresponding to their group assignment; and 3) complete patient-reported outcome measures at baseline and 6-weeks and 3-, 6-, and 12-months post-randomization.
Knee injuries are among the most common musculoskeletal injuries affecting military personnel, accounting for 22% of limited duty profiles and an average of 53 limited duty days per injury in 2017 alone. Patellofemoral pain (PFP) is the most prevalent knee injury affecting Service members but has historically been considered an innocuous and self-limiting condition despite its high rate of persistence. Physical therapy is often the first line-of-defense for PFP management. Published data support the notion that adherence to evidence-based Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPG) improves outcomes 1) for patients, via greater improvements in pain and disability; 2) for providers, by supporting clinical decision making and practice efficiency; and 3) for healthcare systems, by reducing length of treatment, resource utilization, and costs. In 2019, the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) published its first CPG for PFP management to better enable physical therapists to make evidence-based treatment decisions; however, there is limited evidence regarding the effectiveness of a collective, standardized CPG-adherent approach in clinical care. To evaluate whether patients with PFP who receive CPG-adherent care demonstrate superior outcomes as compared to patients receiving the current usual care, we will compare: (1) CPG-adherent care (intervention arm), wherein physical therapy care is provided according to the CPG "Decision Tree" recommendations for PFP management, to (2) Usual Care (UC; comparator arm), wherein care decisions are made by non-research physical therapists in alignment with current organizational and clinical practice standards in the Military Health System (MHS). This multisite, single-blind randomized controlled trial will include 440 active-duty Service members with PFP across four major MHS physical therapy facilities (i.e., Naval Medical Center San Diego, Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton, Brooke Army Medical Center, and Womack Army Medical Center). The sample will include Service members from the Army, Navy, and Marines, as well as both conventional and special operations forces. The co-primary outcomes include changes in two CPG-recommended outcome measures \[Anterior Knee Pain Scale (AKPS) and the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS)\]. Outcomes will be assessed at baseline; 6-weeks post-randomization; and 3-, 6-, and 12-months post-randomization (primary endpoint: 3-months). Secondary outcomes will include between-group differences in confidence with completing duty-related tasks and 12-month analgesic medication prescription and PFP-specific medical resource utilization. An exploratory analysis will seek to determine the predictors and mediators of clinical benefit from physical therapy care for Service members with PFP. Baseline and follow-up assessments will be administered remotely to maximize participant reach and retention. The intervention of interest, CPG-adherent care, is designed to be clinically feasible, with high potential for clinician adoption, which may improve care quality and patient outcomes for Service members with PFP. Long-term, findings from this study have the potential to improve patient care for PFP and other musculoskeletal injury conditions across the MHS by demonstrating the feasibility and positive impact of CPG-adherent care, particularly in terms of improving clinical outcomes and resource utilization and reducing unwanted variability in rehabilitation.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
440
Clinical examination procedures will be used to identify all appropriate impairment subcategories (Overuse/Overload without Other Impairment, PFP with Movement Coordination Deficits, PFP with Muscle Performance Deficits, PFP with Mobility Impairments) and create a subcategory-specific or multimodal (for patients classified to \>1 subcategory) plan of care. Research physical therapists will target all applicable impairment subcategories using the corresponding CPG-recommended interventions, all of which are recommended for use as part of standard-of-care physical therapy practice. The duration and length of care will not be prespecified or standardized across participants to allow flexibility pending participant's care needs and schedule (e.g., vacation, short-term TDY status); however, research PTs will be trained to target providing no more than 10-12 visits over no more than 6-8 weeks to promote generalizability of the CPG-adherent intervention.
Usual physical therapy care will be provided by a licensed outpatient staff physical therapist who is not associated with the research team. The outpatient physical therapists will not treat participants in the CPG-adherent group and will be free to treat their participants based on their current personal and organizational clinical practice standards. The research team will neither influence nor restrict the evaluations conducted or interventions provided.
Naval Medical Center San Diego
San Diego, California, United States
RECRUITINGAnterior Knee Pain Scale (AKPS)
The AKPS is a CPG-recommended, 13-item questionnaire assessing knee function in people with PFP, with items differentially weighted for a maximum score of 100 and higher scores indicating better function.
Time frame: 6-weeks, 3-months (primary endpoint), 6-months, and 12-months post-randomization
Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS)
The 11-point NPRS is a CPG-recommended measure of pain intensity in which patients rate their pain ranging from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst imaginable pain).24-26 Average pain intensity in the past week will be assessed as part of the 3-item PEG, which includes 1-item each regarding average pain intensity, pain interference with enjoyment of life, and impact of pain on general activity.
Time frame: 6-weeks, 3-months (primary endpoint), 6-months, and 12-months post-randomization
Perceived Duty-related Confidence
Perceived confidence with completing duty-related activities will be evaluated using four questions assessing confidence with and perceived ability to perform military-related tasks, two of which are pulled from the Military Orthopedics Tracking Injuries and Outcomes Network (MOTION) Readiness Rehab questionnaire.
Time frame: 6-weeks, 3-months, 6-months, and 12-months post-randomization
12-month Healthcare Utilization
We will use individual electronic health record reviews alongside readily available EHR data elements indexed within Military Health System databases to determine the type and frequency of services received related to knee care during the 12 months following randomization. All medical resource utilization data will be identified and categorized using Healthcare Common Procedure Coding System (HCPCS) Level 1 current procedural terminology (CPT) 4 and 2 codes, International Classification of Disease, 10th Revision (ICD-10) codes, Medical Expense and Performance Reporting System (MEPRS) codes, and/or Health Insurance Privacy Authorization Act (HIPAA) taxonomy numbers. The categories that will be compared include: 1) visits to specialist clinics (e.g., sports medicine, orthopedists, physiatrists, pain management) and other health care providers, 2) diagnostic tests (e.g., x-rays, magnetic resonance imaging), and 3) surgical procedures.
Time frame: 12-months post-randomization
12-month Analgesic Prescription
Medication prescription will be queried using the Pharmacy Data Transaction Service. All medications prescribed to each patient during the 12-month follow-up period (beginning with randomization) will be reviewed. For those identified as analgesics, details such as product name, therapeutic and generic classes, number of days' supply, fill date, and dosage will be extracted to characterize the total number of unique analgesic prescriptions, total days' supply, and days to last prescription during the surveillance period.
Time frame: 12-months post-randomization
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