BACKGROUND
Telerehabilitation is gaining popularity in European and American countries, but whether it can be successfully carried out in China has yet to be supported by clinical studies.
OBJECTIVE
This trial aimed to determine whether a home-based telerehabilitation method is not clinically inferior to standard in-hospital face-to-face rehabilitation for elderly patients with total hip arthroplasty (THA) in China.
METHODS
This multicenter randomized controlled trial was conducted from January 2021 to May 2022 at Shanghai Jiao Tong University affiliated Sixth People’s Hospital and Shanghai Tong Ji University affiliated Tenth People’s Hospital. Sixty-four patients were recruited for this two-arm, single-assessor blinded, randomized controlled trial. The participants were randomly assigned to the in-home telerehabilitation group (TELE group) and the in-hospital physical therapist in-person group (PT group). The intervention consisted of a 12-week home-based rehabilitation program with video instructions and remote coaching on a mobile APP (TELE group). The PT group received a standard rehabilitation intervention assisted by a physical therapist for one month and usual care for the next two months. Patients were evaluated at baseline, 4 weeks, and 12 weeks postoperatively employing functional tests (Timed Up & Go test and Berg balance test) and self-reported questionnaires (Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score [HOOS] and Short Form 12 [SF-12]).
RESULTS
There was no significant difference between the two groups for the demographic and clinical characteristics. 61 participants were recruited (PT group: n=31, women: 48.4% of participants; TELE group: n=30, 33.3% of participants) whose median age was 70 and 69 years, in PT group (IQR 63-73) and TELE group (IQR 66-72) respectively. At 12 weeks follow-up evaluation, the main differences between the two groups regarding the HOOS gains, adjusted for baseline values, were close to zero (P > .05). There was no significant difference in primary and secondary outcome measures between the two groups.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results showed the noninferiority of in-home telerehabilitation and advocated its application as a reliable alternative to in-hospital face-to-face rehabilitation for patients who underwent THA.
CLINICALTRIAL
Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (Number: ChiCTR1900025825)