Exploring Responsiveness to Highly Challenging Balance and Gait Training in Parkinson's Disease

Author:

Albrecht Franziska12ORCID,Johansson Hanna123ORCID,Poulakis Konstantinos4ORCID,Westman Eric4ORCID,Hagströmer Maria15ORCID,Franzén Erika123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Physiotherapy, Department of Neurobiology Care Sciences and Society, Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

2. Women's Health and Allied Health Professionals Theme, Medical unit Occupational Therapy & Physiotherapy Karolinska University Hospital Stockholm Sweden

3. Stockholm Sjukhem Foundation Stockholm Sweden

4. Division of Clinical Geriatrics, Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society Karolinska Institutet Stockholm Sweden

5. Academic Primary Health Care Centre, Region Stockholm Stockholm Sweden

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundExercise potentially improves gait, balance, and habitual physical activity in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, given the heterogeneous nature of the disease, it is likely that people respond differently to exercise interventions. Factors determining responsiveness to exercise interventions remain unclear.ObjectivesTo address this uncertainty, we explored the responsiveness to our highly challenging balance and gait intervention (HiBalance) in people with PD.MethodsThirty‐nine participants with mild–moderate PD who underwent the HiBalance intervention from our randomized controlled trial were included. We defined response in three domains: (1) balance based on Mini‐BESTest, (2) gait based on gait velocity, and (3) physical activity based on accelerometry‐derived steps per day. In each domain, we explored three responsiveness levels: high, low, or non‐responders according to the change from pre‐ to post‐intervention. Separate Random Forests for each responder domain classified these responsiveness levels and identified variable importance.ResultsOnly the Random Forest for the balance domain classified all responsiveness levels above the chance level indicated by a Cohen's kappa of “slight” agreement. Variable importance differed among the responsiveness levels. Slow gait velocity indicated high responders in the balance domain but showed low probabilities for low and non‐responders. For low and non‐responders, fall history or no falls, respectively, were more important.ConclusionsAmong three responder domains and responsiveness levels, we could moderately classify responders in the balance domain, but not for the gait or physical activity domain. This can guide inclusion criteria for balance‐targeted, personalized intervention studies in people with PD.

Funder

Vetenskapsrådet

Center for Innovative Medicine

Gun och Bertil Stohnes Stiftelse

Publisher

Wiley

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