HHS Public Access Author manuscript Author Manuscript

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17. Published in final edited form as: JAMA. 2016 February 9; 315(6): 571–581. doi:10.1001/jama.2016.0276.

Effect of a Task-Oriented Rehabilitation Program on Upper Extremity Recovery Following Motor Stroke: The ICARE Randomized Clinical Trial

Author Manuscript

Carolee J. Winstein, PhD, Steven L. Wolf, PhD, Alexander W. Dromerick, MD, Christianne J. Lane, PhD, Monica A. Nelsen, DPT, Rebecca Lewthwaite, PhD, Steven Yong Cen, PhD, and Stanley P. Azen, PhD For the Interdisciplinary Comprehensive Arm Rehabilitation Evaluation (ICARE) Investigative Team University of Southern California, Los Angeles (Winstein, Lane, Nelsen, Lewthwaite, Cen, Azen); Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia (Wolf); MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital, Washington, DC (Dromerick)

Abstract IMPORTANCE—Clinical trials suggest that higher doses of task-oriented training are superior to current clinical practice for patients with stroke with upper extremity motor deficits. OBJECTIVE—To compare the efficacy of a structured, task-oriented motor training program vs usual and customary occupational therapy (UCC) during stroke rehabilitation.

Author Manuscript

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS—Phase 3, pragmatic, single-blind randomized trial among 361 participants with moderate motor impairment recruited from 7 US hospitals over 44 months, treated in the outpatient setting from June 2009 to March 2014. INTERVENTIONS—Structured, task-oriented upper extremity training (Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program[ASAP]; n = 119); dose-equivalent occupational therapy (DEUCC; n = 120); or monitoring-only occupational therapy (UCC; n = 122). The DEUCC group was prescribed 30

Corresponding Author: Carolee J. Winstein, PhD, University of Southern California, 1540 Alcazar St, CHP 155, Los Angeles, CA 90033 ([email protected]). Group Information: The ICARE Investigative Team members are listed at the end of this article.

Author Manuscript

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: All authors have completed and submitted the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest and none were reported. Disclaimer: This article does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. Role of the Funder/Sponsor: The funders provided input and oversight related to the design and conduct of the study, as well as collection, management, analysis, and interpretation of the data. Preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript and decision to submit the manuscript for publication were solely the responsibility of the authors. Author Contributions: Dr Winstein had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Study concept and design: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Nelsen, Lewthwaite. Acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data: All authors. Drafting of the manuscript: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Lane, Nelsen, Lewthwaite, Cen. Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Lane, Nelsen, Lewthwaite, Azen. Statistical analysis: Lane, Cen, Azen. Obtained funding: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Azen. Administrative, technical, or material support: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Lane, Nelsen, Lewthwaite, Cen. Study supervision: Winstein, Wolf, Dromerick, Nelsen.

Winstein et al.

Page 2

Author Manuscript

one-hour sessions over 10 weeks; the UCC group was only monitored, without specification of dose. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES—The primary outcome was 12-month change in logtransformed Wolf Motor Function Test time score (WMFT, consisting of a mean of 15 timed arm movements and hand dexterity tasks). Secondary outcomes were change in WMFT time score (minimal clinically important difference [MCID] = 19 seconds) and proportion of patients improving ≥25 points on the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) hand function score (MCID = 17.8 points).

Author Manuscript

RESULTS—Among the 361 randomized patients (mean age, 60.7 years; 56% men; 42% African American; mean time since stroke onset, 46 days), 304 (84%) completed the 12-month primary outcome assessment; in intention-to-treat analysis, mean group change scores (log WMFT, baseline to 12 months) were, for the ASAP group, 2.2 to 1.4 (difference, 0.82); DEUCC group, 2.0 to 1.2 (difference, 0.84); and UCC group, 2.1 to 1.4 (difference, 0.75), with no significant between-group differences (ASAP vs DEUCC:0.14; 95% CI, −0.05 to 0.33; P = .16; ASAP vs UCC: −0.01; 95% CI, −0.22 to 0.21; P = .94; and DEUCC vs UCC: −0.14; 95% CI, −0.32 to 0.05; P = .15). Secondary outcomes for the ASAP group were WMFT change score, −8.8 seconds, and improved SIS, 73%; DEUCC group, WMFT, −8.1 seconds, and SIS, 72%; and UCC group, WMFT, −7.2 seconds, and SIS, 69%, with no significant pairwise between-group differences (ASAP vs DEUCC: WMFT, 1.8 seconds; 95% CI, −0.8 to 4.5 seconds; P = .18; improved SIS, 1%; 95% CI, −12% to 13%; P = .54; ASAP vs UCC: WMFT, −0.6 seconds, 95% CI, −3.8 to 2.6 seconds; P = .72; improved SIS, 4%; 95% CI, −9% to 16%; P = .48; and DEUCC vs UCC: WMFT, −2.1 seconds; 95% CI, −4.5 to 0.3 seconds; P = .08; improved SIS, 3%; 95% CI, −9% to 15%; P = .22). A total of 168 serious adverse events occurred in 109 participants, resulting in 8 patients withdrawing from the study.

Author Manuscript

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE—Among patients with motor stroke and primarily moderate upper extremity impairment, use of a structured, task-oriented rehabilitation program did not significantly improve motor function or recovery beyond either an equivalent or a lower dose of UCC upper extremity rehabilitation. These findings do not support superiority of this program among patients with motor stroke and primarily moderate upper extremity impairment. TRIAL REGISTRATION—clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00871715 Clinicians providing care for patients with stroke lack evidence for determining the best type and amount of motor therapy during outpatient rehabilitation. Notwithstanding the considerable resources devoted to stroke rehabilitation care, a recent Cochrane review of interventions for improving upper limb function after stroke concluded that high-quality evidence for the superiority of any current routinely practiced intervention is absent, including the amount and content of motor training.1

Author Manuscript

Two large rehabilitation trials performed in the long-term phase of stroke, after initial rehabilitation had been completed, suggested that intensive, high-repetition, task-oriented training was superior to usual care for improving upper extremity motor outcomes.2,3 With rehabilitation training implemented after spontaneous recovery, improvements can be attributed more directly to the training. Even though the rehabilitation interventions differed in these studies (constraint-induced movement therapy3 and robot-assisted training2), both incorporated the same principles of high movement repetitions and structured task-oriented

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 3

Author Manuscript

practice. Despite this evidence and expert opinion that more practice enhances recovery, these findings have not been incorporated into clinical practice when patients with stroke actually receive rehabilitation therapy. Typical outpatient treatment sessions last 36 minutes, during which patients engage in an average of only 12 purposeful actions within an otherwise unstructured treatment session.4 The goal of the Interdisciplinary Comprehensive Arm Rehabilitation Evaluation (ICARE) was to test the efficacy of the same task-oriented approaches during the outpatient phase of rehabilitation, which typically begins within a month after stroke occurrence. ICARE compared 2 different treatment strategies (intensive, high-repetition, task-oriented training vs unstructured occupational therapy at 2 different doses: 30 hours vs a lower-dose, observation-only control) among patients undergoing outpatient rehabilitation for moderate arm motor impairment after stroke.

Author Manuscript

Methods Study Oversight and Trial Design

Author Manuscript

A motor rehabilitation trial precludes double-blinding; participants were aware of their group assignment. The protocol and design for this phase 3, parallel, 3-group, single-blind, randomized clinical trial are provided in Supplement 1 and were detailed in the ICARE methods article.5 Following institutional review board approvals at each site, participants provided written informed consent. A data and safety monitoring board and medical monitor provided independent oversight. Study biostatisticians with full access to deidentified data managed the statistical analyses with consultation from a blinded statistician. The statistical analysis plan (Supplement 1) was developed and sample size estimations were performed during proposal development and approved by the data and safety monitoring board and the sponsor. Study Population, Screening, and Randomization Patients with moderate upper extremity motor impairment who demonstrated at least minimal initiation of hand and finger extension and who could participate in an intense but distributed rehabilitation program were recruited. To preclude severe cognitive and sensory impairments, the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale subscale scores for neglect and sensory impairment were used, thus allowing focus on upper extremity motor recovery. Per sponsor mandate, race and ethnicity were self-selected from categories determined in 1997 by the US Office of Management and Budget.

Author Manuscript

Participants were recruited from 7 sites, predominantly during inpatient rehabilitation. Early in recruitment, the randomization window was amended from 30 to 90 days to 14 to 106 days after stroke, enabling randomization 16 days earlier and necessitating a 16-day extension to retain the stratification midpoint. Full eligibility criteria are provided in eTable 1 in Supplement 2. An abbreviated list of inclusion criteria includes age older than 21 years; ischemic or hemorrhagic stroke meeting World Health Organization criteria6; upper extremity hemiparesis; voluntary finger extension; no more than 6 outpatient occupational therapy sessions; and absence of traumatic or nonvascular brain injury and subarachnoid or

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 4

Author Manuscript

primary intraventricular hemorrhage. Participants were randomized into 1 of 3 treatment groups. Intervention was completed within 16 weeks of randomization. A stratified block randomization scheme within sites balanced assignment by motor severity and time from stroke onset. The biostatistician performed randomization using hybrid block sizes of 3 or 6, depending on anticipated sample size within each site. Once a participant provided informed consent and the baseline assessment was completed, the study site requested randomization; the data manager confirmed eligibility and the site team leader was notified of the assignment. Treatment Interventions

Author Manuscript

An overview of the interventions in each treatment group is shown in eTable 2 in Supplement 2. The investigational intervention, a structured, task-oriented upper extremity motor training program, termed the Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program (ASAP), is a best-practice synthesis implementing neuroscientific evidence regarding motor training approaches and schedules. This program is principle based, impairment focused,7 task specific,3 intense,4 engaging, collaborative, self-directed,8,9 and patient centered10; it has been previously described and feasibility tested.5,8,9,11–14 The ASAP intervention included an initial evaluation and 30 one-hour treatment sessions (3 times per week for 10 weeks). A constraint or mitt worn on the less affected hand was available but not mandated. Purposeful and skilled movement execution was emphasized. Support for patients’ control or autonomy was provided by choices of specific tasks to be practiced, collaborative problem solving to identify and address movement needs, and encouragement of self-direction in extending practice to community contexts.5,8

Author Manuscript

The monitoring-only usual and customary care (UCC) and dose-equivalent usual and customary care (DEUCC) therapy groups received outpatient occupational therapy based on usual and customary practice as determined by the therapist(s), local practices, payer guidelines, and participant preferences. These groups differed only by the number of sessions of outpatient therapy. For the DEUCC group, study-related treatment prescribed 30 hours of outpatient therapy. Treatment adherence for the dose-equivalent groups was set at 27 hours or more. The UCC group was only monitored, without specification of dose. To prevent contamination of treatment across groups, at each site, the DEUCC and UCC therapies were delivered by different clinicians situated in separate locations from the investigational intervention. The ASAP Manual of Procedures was embargoed during the trial5; it included a formal standardization process. All ASAP therapists signed nondisclosure agreements.

Author Manuscript

Outcome Assessment Participants were assessed at baseline (prerandomization), post-intervention (end of therapy), 6 months, and 12 months (end of study) after randomization by clinicians masked to treatment assignment and standardized in administration of primary and secondary outcome assessments.5 A 12-monthchange in the log-transformed Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT) time score was the primary outcome. The WMFT time score is a mean of 15 hierarchically arranged timed arm movements and hand dexterity tasks.15–18 If a task could

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 5

Author Manuscript

not be completed in 2 minutes (ie, 120 seconds), a time score of 121 seconds was assigned. A log transformation is used to accommodate for the nonnormality in the raw time score.

Author Manuscript

Secondary outcomes included the 12-month change in WMFT time score (minimum clinically important difference, 19 seconds faster, 16% of the range on the dominant side and unknown on the nondominant side19) and improvement in participant- reported Stroke Impact Scale (SIS), version 3.0, hand subscale score (percentage with improvement ≥25 points). Because the SIS hand function range is 0 to 100 points, participants with SIS hand function scores of 75 or higher at baseline (n = 15) were excluded from this analysis. The minimal detectable change and minimal clinically important difference for the SIS hand function subscale are 25.9 points and 17.8 points, respectively.20 The primary end point was the end of study (12 months after randomization; mean, 13.5 months after stroke), while end of therapy (16 weeks after randomization; mean, approximately 22 weeks after stroke) was a secondary end point. Patients (or their designated representatives or caregivers) were contacted by monthly telephone calls to review health status, health care utilization, medications, and adverse events. Adverse events were reported regarding 3 independent characteristics: expectedness, relation to study, and severity.5 Statistical Analysis

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

Baseline characteristics and outcomes, attrition, adherence, and adverse events were compared across groups. Data distribution assumptions were assessed and data transformations made as necessary. All analyses were performed using the intention-to-treat principle, comparing outcomes by assigned group. Data were analyzed for patterns of missing data; because no pattern was found, Markov chain Monte Carlo imputation was used to account for missing data from loss to follow-up or missed evaluations at end of study. Complete case analyses were also performed, although there were no differences in results, so we report the planned intention-to-treat results with multiple imputation herein. Changes from baseline in continuous outcomes were analyzed using analysis-of-covariance models adjusting for baseline values and stratification factors (site, severity, time since onset). For the primary outcome, a 2-sided P < .05 was used to indicate a difference between the ASAP intervention and DEUCC therapy. To adjust for multiple comparisons in secondary aims (DEUCC vs UCC and ASAP vs UCC), a 2-sided P < .025 was used. Per the protocol, the proportion of participants who improved 25 points or more on the SIS hand subscale, that which exceeds a clinically important change20 and would represent at least a full category of difficulty improvement (eg, from “very difficult” to “somewhat difficult”), was also examined. This outcome was evaluated using logistic regression models. Analyses were performed using SAS software, version 9.3 (SAS Institute Inc). In addition to data checks before analyses, residuals for the total group and by group were examined to ensure that model assumptions were met. Besides means and confidence intervals, effect size (Cohen d) was computed to determine the magnitude of effects. This effect size was calculated as the between-group difference in outcome variable mean divided by the common standard deviation of the outcome variable21; confidence intervals for d were

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 6

Author Manuscript

estimated as described by computing the 95% confidence intervals for the noncentrality distribution from the t test of group differences.22

Author Manuscript

Sample size calculations were performed during ICARE proposal development to ensure sufficient power to detect a difference in log-transformed WMFT at 12 months between the ASAP and DEUCC groups at a significance level of .05 and 80% power. Given the population being recruited and the relatively short duration of time from stroke occurrence to enrollment in ICARE, the primary outcome group differences were expected to be between those found in EXCITE3 and VECTORS.23 EXCITE resulted in d = 0.50 for logtransformed WMFT between the high-functioning and the delayed intervention (control) groups and d = 0.63 between the low-functioning and the delayed intervention groups. For EXCITE, there was a 26% change in the control group (from baseline to 1 year) for the primary outcome. VECTORS resulted in a smaller effect between the high-dose and control groups (d = 0.20) for the Action Research Arm Test,24 although the variance of the effect was higher for VECTORS (inpatient acute) than EXCITE (outpatient subacute). For VECTORS, there was a 77% change in the control group (from baseline to 90 days) for the Action Research Arm Test.

Author Manuscript

For ICARE, the DEUCC group was estimated to demonstrate a proportional recovery of approximately 50% on the primary outcome (midway between the 26% in EXCITE and the 77% in VECTORS); thus, the effect size for power was set at d = 0.42. With this effect, using a 2-sided t test with a type I error of .05 and 80% power, at least 90 patients per group would need to be evaluable. With an expected attrition rate of 25%, 120 patients per group was the planned sample size. The secondary outcome measure was the success rate in the SIS hand subscale score, defined as the proportion of patients with a change of 25 points or higher out of 100 on the normalized SIS hand at end of study. Given the estimates for SIS hand function subscale change from acute (VECTORS, 46% [n = 13]), postacute (Kansas City home-based exercise study,25 35% [n = 71]), and subacute (EXCITE, 24% [n = 86]) control data, if the DEUCC group success rate was greater than in EXCITE, less than in VECTORS, and comparable with that of the Kansas City study, then ICARE was powered sufficiently to detect a minimum of 21% difference between groups.

Results Study Participants and Baseline Characteristics

Author Manuscript

From June 2009 through February 2013, 11 051 patients were screened. Given the need for participants to remain in the trial, the most frequent reason for exclusion at chart screening was the clinician’s best judgment about the likelihood of the patient completing the study (44%), which included consideration of social instability, inability to travel for study-related procedures, and concomitant illness. The second most frequent reason for exclusion was no diagnosis of stroke (19.5%). During clinical screening, other exclusions included possible dementia (11.4%), upper extremity Fugl-Meyer (UEFM) motor score too high (11.3%), and clinician’s best judgment (10.9%). See Figure 1 for participant flow through the study. Table 1 summarizes baseline characteristics. Mean age of the participants was 60.7 (SD, 12.5) years; 56% were men and 42% were African American. The 2 largest sites (Atlanta,

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 7

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

Georgia, and Washington, DC) were urban Stroke Belt hospitals.26 At randomization, the mean number of days since stroke was 45.8 (SD, 22.4). Eighty-three percent experienced an ischemic stroke without hemorrhagic conversion; 43% affected the left hemisphere; 48% affected the right hemisphere; and 7% affected the brain stem. The stroke affected the dominant upper extremity in 49% of the sample. Sixty-eight percent of participants underwent inpatient rehabilitation and 18% were referred directly from acute care. Fiftyseven percent were in the less severe (UEFM score ≥36), early-onset (.21) (Table 2). Differences in mean changes were 0.6 (95% CI, −6.4 to 6.5; P = .99) for ASAP vs DEUCC, 2.6 (−3.8 to 9.0; P = .42) for ASAP vs UCC, and 2.1 (95% CI, −4.0 to 8.3; P = .49) for DEUCC vs UCC. Thirty-six percent of participants had less than complete recovery (.40). There were 168 serious adverse events involving 109 participants; the most common were hospitalization (n = 143; 85% of adverse events; 25% of randomized participants) and recurrent stroke (n = 42; 25% of adverse events; 9% of randomized participants). Two of the serious events were deemed related to the intervention, one from hypertension and the other from a wrist fracture.

Author Manuscript

Discussion Among participants with primarily moderate upper extremity motor impairment after stroke, there were no group differences in upper extremity motor performance at 12 months after randomization with a structured, task-oriented motor training program compared with UCC occupational therapy during outpatient rehabilitation. Specifically, the structured, taskoriented motor therapy was not superior to usual outpatient occupational therapy for the same number of hours, showing no benefit for an evidence-based, intensive, restorative

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 9

Author Manuscript

therapy program. In addition, there was no advantage to providing more than twice the mean dose (mean, 27 hours) of therapy compared with the average 11 hours received by the observation-only group, showing that substantially more therapy time was not associated with additional motor restoration. With payer pressures on reducing inpatient rehabilitation, outpatient rehabilitation may be of greater importance for patients with stroke. The findings from this study provide important new guidance to clinicians who must choose the best treatment for patients with stroke. The results suggest that usual and customary communitybased therapy, provided during the typical outpatient rehabilitation time window by licensed therapists, improves upper extremity motor function and that more than doubling the dose of therapy does not lead to meaningful differences in motor outcomes.

Author Manuscript

However, these results cannot be assumed to generalize to other outcomes (eg, healthrelated quality of life, community participation), other stroke-related impairments such as walking,27 other stroke populations, or rehabilitation time points earlier or later following stroke than those studied here. Moreover, the lack of difference between dose groups may be a measurement artifact. Although the mean dose of therapy for the DEUCC group was more than twice that of the UCC group, the latter group had considerable variation in actual dose (ie, a range of 0–46 hours). Thus, mean differences may misrepresent the actual differences between groups. This variability in the observation-only group was not unexpected and was suggested by pretrial survey data (Supplement 1). Post hoc exploratory analysis found no systematic relationship between dose of usual therapy and magnitude of change in WMFT time scores, similar to results from secondary outcomes of the EXCITE trial,28 even though variability in dose across patients was much lower in EXCITE than in ICARE.

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

The ICARE results support the necessity of well-designed dose-response studies of motor training at key clinical time points after stroke, including the periods of inpatient and outpatient care and the long-term period beyond a year after stroke. Different physiological and psychological responses to rehabilitation training might occur at different times after stroke onset,29 raising the possibility that dosing and timing are not independent factors in stroke rehabilitation intervention trials. This observation could explain why trials conducted early after stroke (eg, AVERT30 and VECTORS23) found undesirable effects of more intensive interventions, whereas the EXCITE trial,3 conducted later after stroke, found a positive effect. ICARE, timed in between, found no dose effect. This time window hypothesis provides a plausible explanation for why the results from ICARE are consistent with previous studies of therapy dosing that did not find large dose effects31,32 but also are inconsistent with other findings in which a high dose of task-oriented training, as in EXCITE, was shown to be more effective compared with the control group when the dose of outpatient therapy varied considerably. Future trials in rehabilitation should use designs and methods that consider the natural recovery transpiring during the early period after stroke33 as well as the degree of neurological severity and disability. The data pertaining to dose of rehabilitation therapy may be important to policy makers and may be useful to estimate the cost and expected effect of aftercare in the outpatient setting. Future neurorehabilitation trials should include physiological and psychosocial domains and use designs that directly test hypothesized mechanisms of action.34 This consideration may

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 10

Author Manuscript

include choosing primary outcomes that are sensitive to participation and quality of life and are consistent with patient-centered aspects of health care reform.35 ICARE has several limitations related to the disadvantages that are typical of pragmatic trials of patient-centered treatment decisions. Several consequences resulted from choosing an experimental treatment in the context of current practice. First, spontaneous recovery may have been greater than any treatment effect. Within 6 to 10 weeks after stroke, time from stroke occurrence is independently associated with spontaneous recovery of impairments and activities, explaining 16% to 42% of the observed improvements.33 Previous upper extremity stroke rehabilitation trials (ie, EXCITE and VA Robotics)2,3 were performed later after stroke occurrence, after the early recovery had plateaued and when rehabilitation is typically no longer prescribed.

Author Manuscript

Second, differences in the dose of rehabilitation therapy in the ICARE trial may have been insufficient despite being considerably more than what was reported previously4 and consistent with reports of modified schedules of constraint-induced movement therapy that were shown to be effective.36–38 A different treatment schedule (for example, the same number of hours delivered over a shorter period) might have been more effective. Time on task was not measured in this study, and information about the content of usual therapy was limited and dependent onsite-specific clinical documentation and procedural billing codes (eg, Current Procedural Terminology codes); these choices were necessary for study completion.

Author Manuscript

Third, the use of standard care as a control group in this pragmatic trial imposes limitations, particularly when testing a nonpharmacological intervention. Usual outpatient upper extremity therapy may have evolved over time to resemble the investigational intervention, by following evidence-based guidelines. Continuing education, increased attention to practice guidelines,39,40 awareness of the ongoing ICARE trial,41 and site (partner or affiliate of nearby academic medical center) may have influenced usual care practices. This limitation is inherent to pragmatic trial designs; for ICARE, both usual therapy groups represented a relatively high standard of outpatient practice.

Conclusions

Author Manuscript

Among patients with motor stroke and primarily moderate upper extremity impairment, the use of a structured, task-oriented rehabilitation program, compared with an equivalent dose of customary occupational therapy or with usual and customary occupational therapy, did not significantly improve motor function or recovery after 12 months. These findings do not support superiority of this task-oriented rehabilitation program for patients with motor stroke and moderate upper extremity impairment.

Supplementary Material Refer to Web version on PubMed Central for supplementary material.

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 11

Author Manuscript

Acknowledgments Funding/Support: The ICARE trial was funded jointly by the National Institutes of Health, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (primary), and the National Center for Medical Rehabilitation Research of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (grant U01NS056256). Each author received support from this grant during the conduct of the study.

Glossary

Author Manuscript

ASAP

Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program

DEUCC

dose-equivalent usual and customary care

SIS

Stroke Impact Scale

UCC

usual and customary care

UEFM

upper extremity Fugl-Meyer

WMFT

Wolf Motor Function Test

References

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

1. Pollock A, Farmer SE, Brady MC, et al. Interventions for improving upper limb function after stroke. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014; 11(11):CD010820. [PubMed: 25387001] 2. Lo AC, Guarino PD, Richards LG, et al. Robot-assisted therapy for long-term upper-limb impairment after stroke. N Engl J Med. 2010; 362(19):1772–1783. [PubMed: 20400552] 3. Wolf SL, Winstein CJ, Miller JP, et al. EXCITE Investigators. Effect of constraint-induced movement therapy on upper extremity function 3 to 9 months after stroke: the EXCITE randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2006; 296(17):2095–2104. [PubMed: 17077374] 4. Lang CE, MacDonald JR, Gnip C. Counting repetitions: an observational study of outpatient therapy for people with hemiparesis post-stroke. J Neurol Phys Ther. 2007; 31(1):3–10. [PubMed: 17419883] 5. Winstein CJ, Wolf SL, Dromerick AW, et al. ICARE Investigative Team. Interdisciplinary Comprehensive Arm Rehabilitation Evaluation (ICARE): a randomized controlled trial protocol. BMC Neurol. 2013; 13(5):5. [PubMed: 23311856] 6. Aho K, Harmsen P, Hatano S, Marquardsen J, Smirnov VE, Strasser T. Cerebrovascular disease in the community: results of a WHO collaborative study. Bull World Health Organ. 1980; 58(1):113– 130. [PubMed: 6966542] 7. Platz T. Impairment-oriented training (IOT)—scientific concept and evidence-based treatment strategies. Restor Neurol Neurosci. 2004; 22(3–5):301–315. [PubMed: 15502273] 8. Winstein C, Lewthwaite R, Blanton SR, Wolf LB, Wishart L. Infusing motor learning research into neurorehabilitation practice: a historical perspective with case exemplar from the accelerated skill acquisition program. J Neurol Phys Ther. 2014; 38(3):190–200. [PubMed: 24828523] 9. Winstein, CJ.; Wolf, SL.; Schweighofer, N. Task-oriented training to promote upper extremity recovery. In: Stein, J.; Harvey, RL.; Winstein, CJ.; Zorowitz, RD.; Wittenberg, GF., editors. Stroke Recovery and Rehabilitation. 2. New York, NY: Demos Medical; 2015. p. 320-343. 10. Institute of Medicine. Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health Care System for the 21st Century. Washington, DC: National Academy Press; 2001. 11. Tretriluxana J, Runnarong N, Tretriluxana S, Prayoonwiwat N, Vachalathiti R, Winstein C. Feasibility investigation of the Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program (ASAP): insights into reachto-grasp coordination of individuals with postacute stroke. Top Stroke Rehabil. 2013; 20(2):151– 160. [PubMed: 23611856] 12. James GA, Lu ZL, VanMeter JW, Sathian K, Hu XP, Butler AJ. Changes in resting state effective connectivity in the motor network following rehabilitation of upper extremity poststroke paresis. Top Stroke Rehabil. 2009; 16(4):270–281. [PubMed: 19740732] JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 12

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

13. Lum PS, Mulroy S, Amdur RL, Requejo P, Prilutsky BI, Dromerick AW. Gains in upper extremity function after stroke via recovery or compensation: potential differential effects on amount of realworld limb use. Top Stroke Rehabil. 2009; 16(4):237–253. [PubMed: 19740730] 14. Winstein, CJ.; Kay, DB. Translating the science into practice: shaping rehabilitation practice to enhance recovery after brain damage. In: Dancause, N.; Rossignol, S., editors. Sensorimotor Rehabilitation: At the Crossroads of Basic and Clinical Sciences. Vol. 218. Amsterdam, the Netherlands: Elsevier BV; 2015. p. 331-360. 15. Wolf SL, Catlin PA, Ellis M, Archer AL, Morgan B, Piacentino A. Assessing Wolf Motor Function Test as outcome measure for research in patients after stroke. Stroke. 2001; 32(7):1635– 1639. [PubMed: 11441212] 16. Morris DM, Uswatte G, Crago JE, Cook EW III, Taub E. The reliability of the Wolf Motor Function Test for assessing upper extremity function after stroke. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2001; 82(6):750–755. [PubMed: 11387578] 17. Ang JHY, Man DWK. The discriminative power of the Wolf Motor Function Test in assessing upper extremity functions in persons with stroke. Int J Rehabil Res. 2006; 29(4):357–361. [PubMed: 17106357] 18. Wolf SL, McJunkin JP, Swanson ML, Weiss PS. Pilot normative database for the Wolf Motor Function Test. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2006; 87(3):443–445. [PubMed: 16500182] 19. Lang CE, Edwards DF, Birkenmeier RL, Dromerick AW. Estimating minimal clinically important differences of upper-extremity measures early after stroke. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2008; 89(9): 1693–1700. [PubMed: 18760153] 20. Lin KC, Fu T, Wu CY, et al. Minimal detectable change and clinically important difference of the Stroke Impact Scale in stroke patients. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2010; 24(5):486–492. [PubMed: 20053950] 21. Cohen, J. Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences. 2. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates; 1988. 22. Cumming G, Finch S. A primer on the understanding, use, and calculation of confidence intervals that are based on central and noncentral distributions. Educ Psychol Meas. 2001; 61(4):532– 574.10.1177/0013164401614002 23. Dromerick AW, Lang CE, Birkenmeier RL, et al. Very Early Constraint-Induced Movement during Stroke Rehabilitation (VECTORS): a single-center RCT. Neurology. 2009; 73(3):195–201. [PubMed: 19458319] 24. Yozbatiran N, Der-Yeghiaian L, Cramer SC. A standardized approach to performing the action research arm test. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2008; 22(1):78–90. [PubMed: 17704352] 25. Duncan P, Studenski S, Richards L, et al. Randomized clinical trial of therapeutic exercise in subacute stroke. Stroke. 2003; 34(9):2173–2180. [PubMed: 12920254] 26. Mozaffarian D, Benjamin EJ, Go AS, et al. American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee. Heart disease and stroke statistics—2015 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2015; 131(4):e29–e322. [PubMed: 25520374] 27. Duncan PW, Sullivan KJ, Behrman AL, et al. LEAPS Investigative Team. Body-weight-supported treadmill rehabilitation after stroke. N Engl J Med. 2011; 364(21):2026–2036. [PubMed: 21612471] 28. Wolf SL, Newton H, Maddy D, et al. The EXCITE trial: relationship of intensity of constraint induced movement therapy to improvement in the Wolf Motor Function Test. Restor Neurol Neurosci. 2007; 25(5–6):549–562. [PubMed: 18334772] 29. Murphy TH, Corbett D. Plasticity during stroke recovery: from synapse to behaviour. Nat Rev Neurosci. 2009; 10(12):861–872. [PubMed: 19888284] 30. AVERT Trial Collaboration Group. Efficacy and safety of very early mobilisation within 24 h of stroke onset (AVERT): a randomised controlled trial. Lancet. 2015; 386(9988):46–55. [PubMed: 25892679] 31. Minelli C, Gondim FAA, Barreira AA, Dromerick AW. Rehabilitation of the upper extremity and basic activities of daily living in the first month after ischemic stroke: an international cohort comparison study. Neurol Int. 2009; 1(1):e4. [PubMed: 21577362]

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 13

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

32. Kwakkel G, van Peppen R, Wagenaar RC, et al. Effects of augmented exercise therapy time after stroke: a meta-analysis. Stroke. 2004; 35(11):2529–2539. [PubMed: 15472114] 33. Kwakkel G, Kollen B, Twisk J. Impact of time on improvement of outcome after stroke. Stroke. 2006; 37(9):2348–2353. [PubMed: 16931787] 34. Hart T, Tsaousides T, Zanca JM, et al. Toward a theory-driven classification of rehabilitation treatments. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2014; 95(1 suppl):S33–44.e2. [PubMed: 24370323] 35. Rosenbaum L. The whole ball game—overcoming the blind spots in health care reform. N Engl J Med. 2013; 368(10):959–962. [PubMed: 23465107] 36. Page SJ, Sisto S, Levine P, McGrath RE. Efficacy of modified constraint-induced movement therapy in chronic stroke: a single-blinded randomized controlled trial. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2004; 85(1):14–18. [PubMed: 14970962] 37. Page SJ, Sisto S, Johnston MV, Levine P. Modified constraint-induced therapy after subacute stroke: a preliminary study. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2002; 16(3):290–295. [PubMed: 12234091] 38. Sterr A, Elbert T, Berthold I, Kolbel S, Rockstroh B, Taub E. Longer vs shorter daily constraintinduced movement therapy of chronic hemiparesis: an exploratory study. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2002; 83(10):1374–1377. [PubMed: 12370871] 39. Hubbard IJ, Parsons MW, Neilson C, Carey LM. Task-specific training: evidence for and translation to clinical practice. Occup Ther Int. 2009; 16(3–4):175–189. [PubMed: 19504501] 40. Bravi L, Stoykov ME. New directions in occupational therapy: implementation of the task-oriented approach in conjunction with cortical stimulation after stroke. Top Stroke Rehabil. 2007; 14(6): 68–73. [PubMed: 18174117] 41. Kaplan RM, Irvin VL. Likelihood of null effects of large NHLBI clinical trials has increased over time. PLoS One. 2015; 10(8):e0132382. [PubMed: 26244868]

Members of the ICARE Investigative Team

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

University of Southern California, Administrative Coordinating Center, Los Angeles, California: Carolee J. Winstein, principal investigator; Monica A. Nelsen, program director, SIS standardization assessor; Jennifer Bandich, financial manager; Shannon Massimo, project assistant; Michelle Haines, project assistant; Patricia Hatchett, project manager, ASAP therapist (pilot and proposal phases); Veronica T. Rowe, WMFT standardization assessor, WMFT FAS rater; Claire McLean, blinded evaluator; Arlene Yang, blinded evaluator, WMFT FAS rater; Rachel Tabak, blinded evaluator; Kristin McNealus, Blinded Evaluator; Veronica Strickland, Blinded Evaluator; Julie Y. Kasayama, WMFT FAS Rater; Rebecca Lewthwaite, Co-Investigator, ASAP standardization assessor; Burl Wagenheim, coinvestigator, study psychologist; Brent Liu, neuroanatomical and imaging database director; Ximing Wang, neuroanatomical and imaging data manager; Kevin Ma, neuroanatomical and imaging data manager; David Russak, WMFT quality assurance; Nhi Dang, WMFT quality assurance; Katie Wongthipkongka, WMFT quality assurance; Yanshu Hou, WMFT quality assurance; Sue Duff, T32 fellow; Richard Nelson, webmaster (public site). Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia: Steven L. Wolf, co–principal investigator; Sarah Blanton, site team leader, ASAP therapist; David Burke, Physician investigator; Susan Murphy, research assistant; Aimee Reiss, blinded evaluator; Marsha Bidgood, blinded evaluator; Lois Wolf, ASAP therapist; Gina Holecek, usual care therapist; Megan Hite, usual care therapist; Melissa Tober, usual care therapist; Sara Zeforino, usual care therapist. National Rehabilitation Hospital and Georgetown University, Washington, DC: Alexander W. Dromerick, co–principal investigator, physician investigator; Matthew A. Edwardson, neuroanatomical and imaging analyst (NINDS-Stroke Net fellow); Kathaleen Brady, site

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 14

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Author Manuscript

team leader (August 2012–2015), ASAP therapist; Rahsaan Holley, site team leader (August 2009–August 2012), ASAP therapist; Lori Monroe, site team leader (August 2008–August 2009); Matthew Elrod, ASAP therapist (pilot and proposal phases); Kate Burdekin, research assistant; Siena Quitania, research assistant; Sara Loftin, research assistant; Margot Gianetti, research assistant; Rebecca Feldman, research assistant; Deirdra Tiffany, research assistant; Annie Simons, research assistant; Lauro Halstead, physician investigator; Kanan Desai, blinded evaluator; Hansen Chan, blinded evaluator; Jessica Barth, blinded evaluator; Sambit Mohapatra, blinded evaluator; Carrie Pappe, blinded evaluator; Nora E. Barrett, blinded evaluator; Ericka Breceda Tinoco, blinded evaluator; Diane Nichols, ASAP therapist; Alison Lichy, ASAP therapist; Melissa Cross, ASAP therapist; Mara Levy, usual care therapist; Connie Guercin, usual care therapist; Teresa Tracy, usual care therapist; Jutta Brettschneider, usual care therapist; Molly Fieldsend, usual care therapist; Janice Underwood, usual care therapist. University of Southern California Data Management and Analysis Center, Los Angeles: Christianne J. Lane, DMAC director (years 2–7); Stanley P. Azen, blinded statistician; Steven Yong Cen, database director; James Gardner, database programmer; Li Ding, statistician; Christopher Hahn, statistician; Jiaxiu He, statistician; Caron Park, statistician; Ge Wen, statistician; Miwa Takayanagi, statistician; Anny Xiang, DMAC director (year 1). Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, Long Beach, California: Candice Burtman-Regalado, site team leader, ASAP therapist; Charro Scott, site team leader, ASAP therapist; Richard Adams, physician investigator; Diehma Hoang, physician investigator; Audrey Huang, physician investigator; Shannon Massimo, research assistant; Shuywe Jenq, usual care therapist. Casa Colina Hospital and Centers for Rehabiliation, Pomona, California: Stephanie Kaplan, site team leader, ASAP therapist, ASAP standardization assessor; David Patterson, physician investigator; Cathelyn Timple, ASAP therapist; Shelia Mendon, usual care therapist; Jacob Hazen, usual care therapist; Deborah Ouellette, usual care therapist. Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, Downey, California: Oscar Gallardo, site team leader, ASAP therapist (Spanish bilingual); Covey Lazouras, site team leader, ASAP therapist; Xiao-Ling Zhang, physician investigator; Babak Bina, physician investigator; Joaquin Torres, research assistant; Rosemary Tamayo, research assistant; Byanca Rodriguez, research assistant; Chester Lin, research assistant; Alex Villegas, blinded evaluator (Spanish bilingual); Claire Smith, ASAP therapist; Mark Wolfson, usual care therapist; Kelly Love, usual care therapist. Cedars Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California: Richard Riggs, physician investigator; Michelle Demond, site team leader; Pamela Roberts, site team leader; Nuvia Solis, research assistant; Sara Benham, ASAP therapist; Karina Fakheri, ASAP therapist; Aimee Davis, ASAP therapist; B. A. MacCormack, usual care therapist. Huntington Rehabilitation Medical Associates, Pasadena, California: Sunil Hegde, physician investigator; Cynthia Kushi, site team leader, ASAP therapist; Ilin Ohanessians, clinical site coordinator, site team leader; Michael Parkinson, ASAP therapist; Miriam Burch, usual care therapist. Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois: Richard L. Harvey, medical safety monitor. The following individuals provided oversight during the conduct and analysis of the study: Data Safety and Monitoring Board: Bruce Coull (chair), University of Arizona, Tucson; Stephen Nadeau, University of Florida, Gainesville; Michael Parides, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY; Sue Ann Sisto, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY. National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland: Scott Janis, scientific program officer (NINDS);

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 15

Author Manuscript

Janice Cordell, program official (NINDS); Louise Ritz, DSMB liaison (NINDS); Mary Ellen Michel, program official (NCMRR). Ancillary Study (ICAREGEN; NIH grant R01 NS058755): Steven C. Cramer, principal investigator; Jill See, project coordinator, University of California, Irvine.

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Author Manuscript JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 16

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript Figure 1. Participant Flow in the ICARE Trial

Author Manuscript

ASAP indicates Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program; DEUCC, dose-equivalent usual and customary care; UCC, monitoring-only usual and customary care. Reasons for exclusion are not exclusive. Adherence in the ASAP and DEUCC was defined as 27 hours or more of prescribed treatment; there was no adherence data collected for the UCC group. The study was designed with an estimated a priori attrition rate of 25%; actual attrition rates by group were considerably lower, ranging from 9% to 16% across groups. Attrition rate of withdrawal across groups was not statistically significant (P = .24). Evaluable data at 12 months ranged from 79% to 88%; for intention-to-treat analyses, multiple imputation models were used to estimate end-of-study data for primary analyses.

Author Manuscript JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 17

Author Manuscript Figure 2. Longitudinal Changes in Unadjusted Imputed Mean Scores Across Months for the Primary and Secondary Outcomes

Author Manuscript

Primary outcome, log-transformed Wolf Motor Function Test (WMFT) time score (left) and secondary outcomes, WMFT time score (center) and patient-reported Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) hand function subscale score (right). N=119 in the Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program (ASAP) group; n = 120 in the dose-equivalent usual and customary care (DEUCC) group; and n = 122 in the monitoring-only usual and customary care (UCC) group. Timing of each assessment after randomization was as follows: 0 months = baseline; 4 months = end of therapy; 6 months = follow-up; and 12 months = end of study. Statistical analyses were performed on the imputed intention-to-treat data set. Error bars represent 95% CIs.

Author Manuscript Author Manuscript JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 18

Table 1

Author Manuscript

Baseline Characteristics by Treatment Groupa Characteristics

Author Manuscript

Total (N = 361)

ASAP (n = 119)

DEUCC (n = 120)

UCC (n = 122)

60.7 (12.5)

60.9 (13.7)

59.9 (10.5)

61.1 (13.1)

Male

203 (56.2)

64 (53.8)

67 (55.8)

72 (59.0)

Female

158 (43.8)

55 (46.2)

53 (44.2)

50 (41.0)

American Indian, Aleutian, or Eskimo

5 (1.4)

4 (3.5)

1 (0.8)

0

Asian

19 (5.3)

9 (7.8)

7 (5.8)

3 (2.5)

Pacific Islander

7 (2.0)

3 (2.6)

1 (0.8)

3 (2.5)

African American

151 (42.4)

47 (40.9)

50 (41.7)

54 (44.6)

White

124 (34.8)

38 (33.0)

43 (35.8)

43 (35.5)

Other

50 (14.0)

14 (12.2)

18 (15.0)

18 (14.9)

Age, mean (SD), y Sex, No. (%)

Race, No. (%)

Ethnicity, No. (%)b Hispanic/Latino

36 (10.1)

9 (7.8)

14 (11.7)

13 (10.8)

Non-Hispanic/Latino

320 (89.9)

107 (92.2)

106 (88.3)

107 (89.2)

8 (2.2)

4 (3.4)

2 (1.7)

2 (1.7)

Education, No. (%) Less than high school

Author Manuscript

Some high school

26 (7.2)

6 (5.0)

12 (10.0)

8 (6.6)

Completed high school

72 (20.0)

24 (20.2)

21 (17.5)

27 (22.3)

Some college

130 (36.1)

42 (35.3)

42 (35.0)

46 (38.0)

Completed bachelor’s degree

71 (19.7)

22 (18.5)

26 (21.7)

23 (19.0)

Completed master’s degree

33 (9.2)

15 (12.6)

11 (9.2)

7 (5.8)

Completed doctoral degree

20 (5.6)

6 (5.0)

6 (5.0)

8 (6.6)

247 (68.4)

80 (67.2)

79 (65.8)

88 (72.1)

Referral source, No. (%) Inpatient rehabilitation Outpatient

16 (4.4)

6 (5.0)

5 (4.2)

5 (4.1)

Acute care

66 (18.3)

21 (17.6)

26 (21.7)

19 (15.6)

Transitional day program

7 (1.9)

3 (2.5)

2 (1.7)

2 (1.6)

Open referral

24 (6.6)

9 (7.6)

7 (5.8)

8 (6.6)

Other

1 (0.3)

0

1 (0.8)

0

English

357 (98.9)

117 (98.3)

119 (99.2)

121 (99.2)

Spanish

4 (1.1)

2 (1.7)

1 (0.8)

1 (0.8)

45.8 (22.4)

45.2 (20.3)

45.0 (22.8)

47.0 (23.9)

299 (83.3)

100 (84.0)

98 (82.4)

101 (83.5)

11 (3.1)

3 (2.5)

4 (3.4)

4 (3.3)

Language, No. (%)

Author Manuscript

Time from stroke to randomization, mean (SD), d Stroke type, No. (%) Ischemic without hemorrhagic conversion Ischemic with hemorrhagic conversion

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Winstein et al.

Page 19

Characteristics

Total (N = 361)

ASAP (n = 119)

DEUCC (n = 120)

UCC (n = 122)

43 (12.0)

16 (13.4)

12 (10.1)

15 (12.4)

6 (1.7)

0

5 (4.2)

1 (0.8)

Right hemisphere

173 (47.9)

57 (47.9)

56 (46.7)

60 (49.2)

Left hemisphere

154 (42.7)

49 (41.2)

55 (45.8)

50 (41.0)

Intraparenchymal hemorrhagic

Author Manuscript

Other Stroke location, No. (%)

Cerebellum

1 (0.3)

0

1 (0.8)

0

Brain stem

25 (6.9)

11 (9.2)

5 (4.2)

9 (7.4)

Other

8 (2.2)

2 (1.7)

3 (2.5)

3 (2.5)

Right

168 (46.5)

51 (42.9)

60 (50)

57 (46.7)

Left

193 (53.5)

68 (57.1)

60 (50)

65 (53.3)

Baseline upper extremity Fugl-Meyer motor scorec

41.6 (9.4)

41.7 (9.5)

41.5 (9.2)

41.6 (9.5)

National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale score

3.6 (1.8)

3.6 (2.0)

3.4 (1.7)

3.7 (1.7)

Low severity, early onset

205 (56.8)

68 (57.1)

70 (58.3)

67 (54.9)

Low severity, late onset

50 (13.9)

16 (13.5)

16 (13.3)

18 (14.8)

High severity, early onset

70 (19.4)

23 (19.3)

22 (18.3)

25 (20.5)

High severity, late onset

36 (10.0)

12 (10.1)

12 (10.0)

12 (9.8)

Concordant

176 (48.8)

55 (46.2)

64 (53.3)

57 (46.7)

Discordant

185 (51.2)

64 (53.8)

56 (46.7)

65 (53.3)

105 (29.1)

34 (28.6)

29 (24.2)

42 (34.4)

3.8 (3.0)

4.4 (3.1)

3.3 (2.3)

3.7 (3.4)

Side of hemiparesis, No. (%)

Stroke severity, mean (SD)

Author Manuscript

Strata, No. (%)d

Concordance, No. (%)e

Prerandomization occupational therapy, No. (%)

Author Manuscript

Amount of prerandomization occupational therapy, mean (SD), h

Abbreviations: ASAP, Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program; DEUCC, dose-equivalent usual and customary care; UCC, monitoring-only usual and customary care. a

Percentages may not add to 100% due to rounding.

b

Ethnicity was determined by self-report; decline to report was removed from the comparison of ethnicity.

c Upper extremity Fugl-Meyer motor score range, 19–58 (low severity, ≥36; high severity, 75 (n = 15) were excluded from these analyses.

Because of skew in the Wolf Motor Function Test at baseline and end-of-study, both means and medians are reported; median Wolf Motor Function Test scores are presented for descriptive purposes only.

d

c

b

For the primary outcome (ASAP vs DEUCC), α = .05; for the secondary outcomes (ASAP vs UCC and DEUCC vs UCC), α = .025. The end of the study was the primary end point and occurred 12 months after randomization. P values for group comparisons of change from baseline to end of study were derived from the imputed intention-to-treat model; imputed data are in eTable 3 in Supplement 2.

a

Abbreviations: ASAP, Accelerated Skill Acquisition Program; DEUCC, dose-equivalent usual and customary care; UCC, monitoring-only usual and customary care.

Improved ≥25 points, No. (%) with outcome

Outcome

No. of Participants

Author Manuscript

No. of Participants

Author Manuscript UCC (n=122)

Author Manuscript

DEUCC (n=120)

Author Manuscript

ASAP (n=119)

Winstein et al. Page 21

JAMA. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 March 17.

Effect of a Task-Oriented Rehabilitation Program on Upper Extremity Recovery Following Motor Stroke: The ICARE Randomized Clinical Trial.

Clinical trials suggest that higher doses of task-oriented training are superior to current clinical practice for patients with stroke with upper extr...
426KB Sizes 0 Downloads 14 Views