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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07376187
NA

Digital Physiotherapy for Pediatric Chronic Suppurative Lung Diseases

Sponsor: University of Thessaly

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This is a prospective, single-center, two-arm (1:1), assessor-blinded, randomized controlled clinical trial that will be conducted in collaboration with the outpatient clinic of the third Pediatric Pulmonology Unit, "Attikon" University Hospital of Athens in Greece. The aim of the study is to investigate the effects of applying digital physiotherapy services in the management of specific clinical outcomes in children with chronic suppurative lung diseases, other than cystic fibrosis. The research question is whether airway clearance techniques and exercise training that are performed remotely using digital health services (DHSs) can improve functional and exercise capacity, as well as compliance with ACTs, compared to usual care. The intervention program includes airway clearance techniques (ACTs), as well as aerobic and strengthening exercises that can be implemented easily in an online setting at home with minimal equipment. The duration of the program will be 12 weeks, and the prescribed weekly regimen will consist of 50-minute remote sessions: two synchronous, supervised sessions conducted via the Vsee platform, and a minimum of one asynchronous, unsupervised session. Children will be encouraged to maintain daily adherence to the exercise protocol.

Official title: Digital Physiotherapy Services in the Management of Pediatric Chronic Suppurative Lung Diseases: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

6 Years - 12 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

32

Start Date

2026-05-01

Completion Date

2028-08-31

Last Updated

2026-01-30

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Videoconferencing (Vsee platform)

The prescribed weekly regimen will consist of 50-minute remote sessions: two synchronous, supervised sessions conducted via the Vsee platform, and a minimum of one asynchronous, unsupervised session. Children will perform ACTs (including individualized teaching and review of postural drainage, percussion, vibration, ACTs devices, huffing, coughing), diaphragmatic breathing, and blowing games. During the synchronous, supervised videoconference sessions, they will be monitored/supervised by the pediatric physiotherapist. The exercise program will be based on the 24-letter Greek alphabet, where each letter represents an individual aerobic or strengthening exercise. The exercise program consists of 16 exercises per session, varied on the four-letter words chosen at a time. At each session, a combination of four words will be performed. The exercise program will last 25 to 30 minutes per session. The exercise workload will be equal to 60 - 70% of maximum heart rate.

DEVICE

Specially designed website (FysΑΩ)

The DHSG will be granted access to a website (www.fysao.gr) for disease management, including information about common symptoms, nutrition, pharmacological treatment, exercise, and ACTs performance. To facilitate adherence and longitudinal monitoring, the DHSG will receive automated weekly reminders for ACTs and exercise performance. Through the web portal's integrated evaluation forms, children can report daily symptomatology and track any clinical fluctuations. All the ACTs and the exercise program have been digitized as high-definition videos and images, ensuring asynchronous accessibility for the DHSG. Furthermore, the platform facilitates secure communication, enabling children and their parents/caregivers to communicate with healthcare professionals via integrated email or direct document transmission.

Locations (1)

Physiotherapy Department, University of Thessaly

Lamia, Fthiotis, Greece