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RECRUITING
NCT07383753

Virtual Hand-Arm Assessments for Children With Cerebral Palsy

Sponsor: Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Cerebral palsy (CP) affects approximately 1 in 500 Canadian children, and the majority experience hand and arm limitations that impact independence, participation in daily activities, and overall quality of life. Many children require ongoing clinical assessments and therapy delivered in specialized centres, creating significant burden related to travel, scheduling, and interruptions to school and work. Barriers such as geography, socioeconomic factors, and pandemic-related service disruptions have further limited equitable access to in-person care. Although virtual care has expanded rapidly and families have expressed strong interest in hybrid care models, there is currently no validated approach for conducting comprehensive virtual hand-arm assessments for children with CP. Virtual administration of standardized assessments, individualized goal-based evaluations, and naturalistic observation tools has not been systematically studied. Evidence is urgently needed to determine which assessments can be administered virtually, how acceptable and feasible they are for families, and whether virtual and in-person assessment methods produce equivalent results.

Official title: Virtual Hand-Arm Assessments for Children With Cerebral Palsy: Helping Us to Achieve Equity in Rehabilitation Care and Research

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

6 Years - 17 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

100

Start Date

2025-10-22

Completion Date

2027-01

Last Updated

2026-02-17

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Upper-Limb Virtual and In-Person Assessment

Participants complete a standardized upper-limb assessment protocol that includes two virtual videoconference assessments-delivered one week apart to evaluate test-retest reliability-and one in-person clinic assessment with the same research therapist to enable within-participant comparison of virtual and in-person scores. After each session, children, caregivers, and therapists complete brief surveys assessing feasibility, ease of completion, acceptability, and preferences. Participants also wear bilateral wrist-worn inertial sensors for five consecutive days at home to collect continuous data on naturalistic upper-limb activity. Families also provide caregiver-recorded videos of the child performing two preselected meaningful activities in their home environment. These videos are later scored using the Perceived Quality Rating Scale (PQRS) to evaluate individualized functional performance.

Locations (3)

Grandview Kids

Ajax, Ontario, Canada

Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital

Toronto, Ontario, Canada