Physiotherapy Rehabilitation for Osteoporotic Vertebral Fracture (PROVE): Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
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posted on 2025-08-01, 09:48 authored by KL Barker, MK Javaid, M Newman, C Minns Lowe, N Stallard, H Campbell, V Gandhi, S LambBackground: Osteoporosis and vertebral fracture can have a considerable impact on an individual's quality of life. There is increasing evidence that physiotherapy including manual techniques and exercise interventions may have an important treatment role. This pragmatic randomised controlled trial will investigate the clinical and cost-effectiveness of two different physiotherapy approaches for people with osteoporosis and vertebral fracture, in comparison to usual care.Methods/Design: Six hundred people with osteoporosis and a clinically diagnosed vertebral fracture will be recruited and randomly allocated to one of three management strategies, usual care (control - A), an exercise-based physiotherapy intervention (B) or a manual therapy-based physiotherapy intervention (C). Those in the usual care arm will receive a single session of education and advice, those in the active treatment arms (B + C) will be offered seven individual physiotherapy sessions over 12 weeks. The trial is designed as a prospective, adaptive single-blinded randomised controlled trial. An interim analysis will be completed and if one intervention is clearly superior the trial will be adapted at this point to continue with just one intervention and the control. The primary outcomes are quality of life measured by the disease specific QUALLEFO 41 and the Timed Loaded Standing test measured at 1 year.Discussion: There are a variety of different physiotherapy packages used to treat patients with osteoporotic vertebral fracture. At present, the indication for each different therapy is not well defined, and the effectiveness of different modalities is unknown.Trial registration: Reference number ISRCTN49117867. © 2014 Barker et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Funding
HTA 10/99/01
National Institute for Health Research
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© 2014 Barker et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.Notes
This is the final version. Available from BMC via the DOI in this record.External DOI
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enFCD date
2020-06-15T15:11:52ZFOA date
2020-06-15T15:17:00ZCitation
Vol. 15, 22Department
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