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Overground robotic exoskeleton vs conventional therapy in inpatient stroke rehabilitation: results from a pragmatic, multicentre implementation programme

Pui Kit Tam, Ning Tang, Nur Shafawati Kamsani, Thian Yong Yap, Ita Coffey-Aladdin, Shi Min Goh, Yook Cing Lui, Rui Ling Lee, Ramaswamy Suresh, Effie Chew

Year
2025
Citations
11
Access
Open access

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite the reported efficacy of overground robotic exoskeleton (ORE) for rehabilitation of mobility post-stroke, its effectiveness in real-world practice is still debated. We analysed prospectively collected data from Improving Mobility Via Exoskeleton (IMOVE), a multicentre clinical implementation programme of ORE enrolling participants with various neurological conditions and were given options to choose between 12 sessions of ORE or conventional therapy (control). METHODS: This is analysis of participants under IMOVE who fulfilled the following criteria (i) primary diagnosis was stroke (ischemic, hemorrhagic; first or recurrent), (ii) onset of stroke was within 9 months and (iii) the intervention was during inpatient stay. They should also fulfill the general IMOVE inclusion and exclusion criteria which were resembling general clinical and manufacturing criteria of ORE. Outcome measures included Functional Ambulatory Category (FAC), Rivermead Mobility Index (RMI), Functional Independence Measure (FIM) and Clinical Outcome Variable Scale (COVS), measured immediately before and after the 12 sessions of therapy, and mean distance walked per session. RESULTS: = 0.136, p = 0.034). The mean distance walked per session for ORE group was almost three times that of control for those with baseline FAC 0 (121.5 [SD 31.1]m vs 35.0 [SD 41.0]m, 95% CI 62.2-110.9, d = 2.54 p < 0.001) and FAC 1 (145.8 [SD 31.6]m vs 52.2 [SD 42.5]m, 95% CI 61.8-125.2, d = 2.71, p < 0.001). The difference was not observed for FAC 2 to 3 (162.9 [SD 29.2]m vs 134.2 [SD 87.5]m, 95% CI -22.2 to 79.7, d = 0.41, p = 0.252). CONCLUSION: In a pragmatic setting, use of ORE for gait training enabled patients with lower ambulatory capacity to walk longer distances during therapy sessions. Patients who required continuous assistance during ambulation (FAC 1) had significantly better gains in FIM-motor compared to conventional therapy, suggesting possible benefit of ORE for this group. TRIAL REGISTRATION: The trial was registered with clinicaltrials.gov (NCT05659121) on April 14, 2022.

Keywords

RehabilitationMedicinePhysical therapyStroke (engine)Functional Independence MeasureRivermead post-concussion symptoms questionnairePhysical medicine and rehabilitationAmbulatoryPowered exoskeletonSurgery

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