Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Stopping OsteoARthritis After an ACL Tear
Sponsor: University of British Columbia
Summary
By 2040, 25% of Canadians will have osteoarthritis, a disabling joint condition. Most people think osteoarthritis only affects older adults, but 50% of the 700,000 Canadian youth who hurt their knee playing sports annually will develop osteoarthritis by 40 years of age. These young people with old knees face knee pain and disability for much of their adult lives, interfering with parenting, work, and recreation. Yet, most do not know about osteoarthritis or how to reduce their risk. In this clinical trial, people who have torn the Anterior Cruciate ligament in their knee and had reconstruction surgery 9-36 months previously will be randomized to receive either a 6-month virtual education and exercise therapy program called Stop OsteoARthritis (SOAR) or a minimal intervention control program. Researchers will test if those who received the SOAR program have larger gains in knee health, including pain, symptoms, function, and quality of life at 6, 12, and 24 months. Researchers will also use MRIs (baseline and 24 months) to assess how the SOAR program influences knee cartilage degeneration and its cost-effectiveness.
Official title: The Stop Osteoarthritis (SOAR) Hybrid Effectiveness-Implementation Type 1 Randomized Controlled Trial for Young People At-High-Risk of Early Onset Knee Osteoarthritis
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
16 Years - 35 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
210
Start Date
2024-05-01
Completion Date
2028-12-30
Last Updated
2024-05-10
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Stop OsteoARthritis (SOAR) program
The SOAR program is a 6-month, online-delivered (videoconferencing), PT-guided knee health program which consists of; 1. Knee Camp: Includes interactive education, and 1:1 physiotherapy knee exam and counseling session to co-identify home-based exercise-therapy and physical activity goals to address participants' unique functional limitations. Participants are given a wrist-worn activity monitor to wear 24hours/day. 2. Individualized Weekly Home-based Exercise-Therapy and Physical Activity Program: At home, participants work to meet their exercise-therapy and physical activity goals. Exercises and physical activity are tracked with an online form and the activity monitor. Participants can also attend an optional weekly group class. 3. Weekly PT-guided Exercise-Therapy and Physical Activity Counselling: Each week, participants attend a 1:1 physiotherapist counseling session to modify exercise-therapy and physical activity goals.
Living Well after ACLR program
Participants in the minimal intervention CONTROL group will receive access to a 30-minute educational video (knee anatomy, ACLR information, general exercise, physical activity, and goal-setting principles), a best practice workbook, one video-recorded virtual session with a physiotherapist (naïve to SOAR) who will explain the booklet and answer questions but not volunteer information beyond the video or booklet and the same wrist-worn activity tracker as the experimental group.
Locations (2)
Arthritis Research Canada
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Sea to Sky Orthopaedics
Whistler, British Columbia, Canada